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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1908)
EDEBMIa BSE: OEM dODEM iMs! ,r H THE JOURNAL A!t' INDEPENDENT SKWSPAPEK. . C. 8. JACKSON. ..Pobllaber !uW!bl Tirjr mamlng (e"ept Sunday) and rinT PooUy Burning at 1b Journal Build tr.gr. fifth Dd TtnihiU atreeU. Portlnnn. Or, Entwra at the pnstofflce a Portland, Of., for trD.mUUm through tbe mll eronl-cUaa ctwr. - . ,"-.y.-.-.Vi i. ,4 ;. - 5T.I,KlHONK8 MAIS TITS. HOMIt.i A.6051. AU depurtaiPBM teached by-these nnmtmre. Tell ttse operator the fli-pMtmenr too want." -fcaet Slda.otaee, B-SU.Jiat 838.. , ,., FOUEIGN ABVEBT18JSG; JBePBESENTATIVB Vre-lawl-RenJamtn Spealal AlwUilnf. Ageney. Prantwick RulMIn. 25 ftfto avenue. Tfork; 10OT-0 By Hollaing. Ctilciio..-, Bnlcrlptloa Tu br null to any adJrS to tbe United Bute, Cicada or Mexico. -. .. -.'-. DAILt. ' - do jaar......',.S.oOODa' nxmtfc..,....t -00 . - ---. SCNPAY. - Cm year... $2. 50 i On month.,.,...! .15 PATH AND SrNDAT. On year........ 8T.50 1 One month $.65 ; Be not. over, anxious lo ob-. tain relaxation or repose. For he -who Is - o, will get neither. Confucius. ' ' .' X ARROWED BY EXTTROXMEXT. land was his , environment.. It 1 gave him, as it gives most men,. a biased viewpoint It is: dif ficult to think broad thoughts amid the narrowed circle of tall buildings and stone walls of New Yorfc. 'Wall street is the world to those who live in it, and their estimate of what is good for the-world Is made up with la those hard environs. Human na turals selfish as well as erring. The safest view is that .wMch ' is , nnob etrncted by sky-scrapers. ' The world is big and full of varying and con flictlng Interests. Until , all the ttratas of society are seen and un derstood, there Is no real breadth of vision..:-':,.. . - , . t ' ' Transplanted to the 1 wide open west, Mr. Cleveland would have been as big as bis country, and as broad as its breadth. He was full of hu man sympathy,' and was anxious to nerve his countrymen.". His heart was big and his courage undaunted. ; la the main his political maxims were true, as measured from bla , view point, which was" the viewpoint of high walls', stony streets and adam antine buildings. It is a viewpoint all its own, and differing from near- j Jy' all the 'rest' of this great land. When he sold United States bonds in the deal with the Morgan syndicate find gave the buyers a profit of $16, 000,000, Mr. Cleveland was honest but wrong in his conception and wrong because of the advice he had listened to. His associations with the kid-gloved cormorants who revel in coupons and bonds and his unfa mlliarity with -the souls and aspira tions of the commonality of his coun trymen made him fail to see that the transaction J was a tragedy, :v It led him Into walks and through paths that Grover Cleveland In his innate honesty of purpose and -unhesitating courage never would have traveled. History should, and will deal kind ly with the, name of Mr. Cleveland, not for his statesmanship, but for Ideals. It will take away from him the odium of a panic with which, he was blamed, but of which he was in no part or sense the cause. It will hail him as one of the heroic- figure of his time, apt . for constructive achievement as-president of the re public, but for his unswerving stead fastness in following the light, as he saw it' .".'' ' " , WE CAN SAYJ3 OURSELVES. TV 0 THE PEOPLE of Oregon real I ize that they are literally and f J bodily -. In the hands of one man? Some one has said that "he who controls its transportation rules a state.'" Measured by this test, what-is the situation of -Ore gon people? Who owns their rail roads, and wnat lines nave been built within the past dozen years? : It has been a thousand times said. and it is true, that instead of build ing new lines, Mr, Harriman spends great sums of money to prevent other people from building lines into Oregon. ; Did be, or did he hot" offer obstructions in every possible , way to the building ot the north bank road?- Has he, or has be not, gob bled np every road that In any way offered the remotest prospect of pro moting" and .developing Oregon? ' Ours is an undeveloped . state. Western Oregon alone is capable of sustaining a population of 6,000,000. Eastern Oregon -with Its broad -.expanse of plain, has enormous pos Blbilities. , Thirty million dollars col lected In" surplus tolls ia ;iO years on a single line and spent in exploit ing lines in other states has been Mr. Harrlmaa'e hand in peopling and de veloping pregon.tWe( have 1,720 miles of railroad; - Washington has 8,260, nearly' double, Oregon has the great valley of the Willamette, tnd unsurpassable southwestern Ore gon, for neither of which Washing ton has a counterpart! yet Waslting tnn, the child has nearly double the railroads and almost double the pop ulation of Oregon, the parent state. Whether they know it or not, Ore f on people are , being ; exploited. There is a strangle hold at heir tliroats. snd a toll taker at their farm homes. There is a tax on their l.tis, and barriers blocking their way to progress. ' Tribute is lal.d uroa their labor,and fetters hang nl out their enterprise. They toil on i 'ul thf.y proiluce, but their march t s roress is blotked by this man - i will nfcithfr build raUrqad nor lt oilers build them, i,They are lit- erally and bodily In his hands. They are gagged,; bound and nearly help less, and Mr. Harriman has his hands In their- pockets." . He is collecting transportation rates ; that ; were la vogue 25 years ago. and they are powerless to resist; Thirty millions of velvet on a single line between Portland and : Huntington without one single proposal for extensions or one atom expended to assist In the development of Oregon is the proof ot his policy of exploitation. 1 It is a tragedy ia transportation tor which there Is no parallel nor precedent. A state of magnificent resources, un bounded possibilities and progressiva people "stood up and made, to de liver is the situation. - The arennes of transportation harnessed and held, the land grant forests pocketed and the people plundered by the gen teel" methods known and practiced by-high financiers is the long ana the. short tot ' this 'story ot Oregon" wrongs.- . 'r,':1-J ':- : mat is the relief? It is easy. Tha men ot Oregon are not mere pawns Jor Mr.' Harriman; to move. They can think and they can act.: They can open their waterways and make them free. They can group together and with the power of that grouping Induce other capital to open up Ore gon. Action,' instead of toleration and mere suplneness to Mr. Har riman' will, will . point the way Why not make the attempt , Why bow to the will of our over-lord, and be his lambs to pluck, his shorn sheen to exdoit? They can save themselves. Self-salvation is best salvation. ' Where there will there is a way! - the is a JTJXE BUG AND HAWK. T IS not . altogether comfortable to the sons of earth to feci that 19 the wars of the future they are to occupy the relation of the June-bug to the hawk. Outfit seems likely that; nations, now qccupylnst their genias In producing' ships for the destruction of enemies must soon be emulating their loving : allies in the production of aerial armaments. A Russian Aero-club has Just been formed under the presidency of Gen eral Kaulbars and the patronage of the government, for perfecting aerial ; navigation, which-. Saint Nicholas, czar of all the Russlas and head of the divine institution known as the Greek church, has blessed with tb gift ot 50,000 rubles ($25,000) with the understanding that all Is under the administration of the minister of war. : Meantime, the , mechanical , gen iuses ot the world are engaged In at tempting tb make an effective weap on against. balloons.: This, however is nothing, new, for In 1870 an es pecial gun had been Invented by a German, named Treskow, an officer ot the Prussian army, who ' offered the first weapons to Von Moltke, by whom they were accepted and used with such ef fectiyeness against the French- balloons that . In a single week of the month' of November, nine balloons had - been destroyed This gun demanded four minutes and an elevation of -55 degrees for each discharge. - Later German in ventions have a capacity of 24 dis charges per minute at an angle of 70 degrees. Other nations, notably the French, have been at work on this "arm of the service." Although, the several . nations preserve profound secrecy on the subject, it is well known that the great object aimed ut is a weapon that will discharge schrapnel, or a mode by which scattering fire may be belched in every direction, so that the gun may be used .with. , equal ' effectiveness against terrestial and aerial targets. THE TRUSTS NOT OFFENDED, A! RE what are popularly known as i trusts to be an issue in tbe coming campaign? The people have heard and read a great deal about the. trusts, and the neces sity ot breaking them up to some ex tent, or regulating their operations, so that they could not continue to be great monopolies, controlling the output and price of manynecessary commodities. President Roosevelt has on frequent occasions lectured against the trusts, and written mes sages about them, and has attacked some ot them through the courts. Restriction of the trusts is in fact ens ol his principal professed pol icies. But the Chicago convention was very areful to say nothing that would antagonize the trusts, or com mit the party Insofar as a conven tion can do so, to the president's policy in this regard.' The plank on the Philippine tariff .is significant in this connection f It says f "Between the United States and the Philippines we believe in a free Interchange of products, with such limitations as to sugar and tobacco as will avoid in Jury to domestic interests." :: 1 The only meaning tb-ere is in this' that amounts to anything is that the sugar : and tobacco trusts need not be alarmed; they will be dnly taken care: of. as heretofore, and conse quently are expected to make the' us ual ; large 1 campaign - contributions. The sugar and tobacco trusts are al most absolute monopolies. They can fix the price of these commodities, snd make almost as many millions a year profit out of the American peo ple meanwhile doing the Filipinos a shameful injustice as avarice could covet. And yet this "Roose velt policies" platform1 in effect tells these trusts that they will not be In terfered with, . v; Ana tners is not a vora, eitner, l j- that wou.14 alarm any of the snx.t of other trusts or .uoneplltr- steel trust, the arv(er trst glass trust, the sail trust, the apr trust, and many- othrs, Thy are all at least BeratlToiy gir to un derstand that they caa rra ihflr pleasant occupt ion t vodrtsf thetr (ellow fititena by aid f laws passed for their benefit. vBt tht r was a tariff m tsion plank, ta which the difference la the pay ot labor abroad and la. this coun try was mentioned as a basis ot re- vision- Thla looks pretty well, and probably Mr. Tart rl!r favors such a reTisioa, aa he does tree trade -with our subjects la the Philippines, but nobody supposes that the party as now controlled will pass or even frame any law along this line,' That even indefinite measure of, reform adopted in deference to the growing tariff revision i sentiment throughout the country, was not adopted in sin cere earnest la sufficiently shown, by the care with which the platform avoided any positive declaration that could be offensive to the trusts, THE Hm'STTTUTION"- AGAIN. r vw :: ;?.;; . p..:, :: -A TrtHE 1 Pendleton Tribune Is slll I . harping on the federal const! I tutlon. It says that any state law which conflicts with the constitution is necessarily void, and from this jumps to the Inconsequent conclusion , that - the election by the legislature of a senator who was the people's choice rather than the legis lature's choice would be void.- All this and there are columns of it in the course of a week in that paper- is political pettifoggery. By agree ing beforehand, as ' candidates, to vote for the people's choice, members of the legislature officially made that man their choice. And this Is no less so because that man differs in poli tics Trorri" a majority bf the legisla ture, fort In this' voluntary advance choice the candidates, now the mem bers, took this possibility fully into consideration. The Statement No. 1 members made a ' voluntary choice early last spring of the man whom the people, would choose, and they will adhere to that choice next win ter. The federal constitution will be fully complied with In every respect. The people have chosen;' the legisla ture chooses : to, elect the people's choice and yet some political hair- splitters and. constitutional .editors try to make It out that such a choice is unconstitutional, while a choice made through bribery, promises ot office and pther spoils, and all sorts ot corrupt means, would of course be entirely constitutional. It a member ot the legislature votes for a man for United States senator in considera tion of an office, or a wad of money or some other personal favor, though the candidate : Is : not. his personal favor, though ' the candidate is not his personal choice, that is perfectly constitutional; but If the member of the legislature votes for man whom the whole people have cnosen that unless this man is bis personal and political : chfilce, is unconstltu tlonal. We confess to a weariness of such arguments. ' ; ;r - But though still harping on the constitutional . bogy, - the Tribune says: ui course me legislature win elect Chamberlain, nd should, tor a majority of its members have prom ised to. Nothing else Is expected nor should : anything -v else " be done, What! I and thus smash the sacred constitution, obedience to s which is the highest political duty?. But no body really believes that there is any merit or substance whatever in' this flimsy, far-fetched plea for constltu tionality. . WILL WEEDS BE A BLESSING? T HERE is a possibility, according to careful observers In that re gion, that the growing weed pest In Umatilla and perhaps some other counties ef the wheat belt will, eventually prove a blessing in disguise in forcing the breaking np of the now increasingly large wheat farms and the substitution of diver sified farming. The tumble weed and the vtarweed, or whatever they are, have become a serious pest in some sections, much reducing the big wheat raisers' crops and profits, and the larger' the wheat farms are the more difficult it la to get rid of tbe weeds.' ' Land on which, a, crop is grown only; every other. year,-lying f allovjf every fcecond ,year,' Is "aura . to become toul with weeds. -.It would seem possible to. eradicate them", but it appears that- in many .cases this is not done, and unless all the. farm ers will cooperate to do so, it is dis couraging work for some of them. ,- So, a man who has lived a good while up there tells The Journal,' It la likely that unless concerted and systematic v efforts are -' put; forth throughout that region to eradicate these -weeds, the big i wheat raisers will give np trying to farm hundreds of acres,, and will divide up their farms lor the purpose of raising a variety, of crops, cultivating the soil every year, ana ridding it ot tne, weeds. ; If this .should gradually happen It would no doubt be a good thing for that . country. ; In some sections small farming might not be practicable this would especially be the case where water Is unattain ablebut In many other localities good crops of other products besides wheat could be raised every ' year, and a ' family could do well on a small farm. Hepresontative Hayes of Cali fornia, on bis return froth Washing- ton. recently, was xPiWled -to 2mre . -.. ... , . . i sail that ia a conversation he had wlta rrld(nt Roosevelt Just be- tar llay left. the president said that he was "sending to Japan the narpt correspondence that any na Uoa has ever received," and that, if he twuU not get what be wishes "by diplomacy, he 'would rt It "by ex elusion legislation. The president U not very cautious man, but no body who read this report supposed that he had made such a statement to Hayes, who seems desirous ot mag nifying his importance. 1 He i later claimed to hare been misquoted,' but this Is always the case when' a public man sees that he has said something he regrets. Roosevelt is no doubt working for exclusion, but re didn't tell Hayes what Hayea was reported to have said he did. '. U Small Change Dooam't that Door fellow Loab ever set a vacation ; . ,-. How would It do to make a few cewn- brokera detuveT .i . The nomination "Of Sherman was s lap at Governor Hug-bee. . May the O A. It. veterans' have a lor ous time over at Newport this welc - . troha.bIv the relevenatlon of Mary happened because she came to Oregon. ... '. . ' o " ' .; ' Joev Voraker will e&v" the earth 1 either round op fat It heMx allowed to aiay jo. Wlin the Teddv: bear coee out of IZ1V iQUIJJ . UMI BUCI VUl V. what sort of a Billy beast Will plaoe Not a goat? - 1 rajihinn, take It o Annarentlv there won't he anv "Uies" at Denver; the Bryan steam roller will omy nave jonnaon to run over. o Several or the Republican nartv pianxs oir vnnr notes, says tne Syra cuse journal, les, ana splinters, - One of Taft's congratulatory tele grams was signed "Nick and Alice." But there la only one vote between them. It will be with rea-ret. If at all. that the Puget sound papers will report that e rest or -water on toe Columbia bar. W Tuns-fans attended the Renuhll- can ' convention, but he la too diplo matic to express an opinion about it. . Druggists of Oregon mar meet next year In Pendleton. That town has gone dry, but It will still have drug stores. . Kone farthest inland where trains and ships that can be fully loaded can meet. ' - v it la suggested : that a " new. order might be formed, the A. A. A. A- Ancient Amalgamated Association ' of Allies. :..''.; ':,;,-r:; v '- :;:;.:-' . ;'--;'::'v? A frequent expression - rs: , "It goes without saying." ,. It would be better If a good many more things were let go that way. - . t ,' ; J. Pierpont Morgan baa been made an Lt. D. again. It would be more ap propriate to make him an IL F. D. doctor of high flnanoe. . - ; The '..young ' kins off Knaln evlrlerttl v Intend that the royal line ehall not run Short again in the near future, if those ooy Kiu grow up ana ao weu. It seems that a good dear nf the time that Henejr spends in court Is occupied In , calling people liars, or retorting to uwBi wnu 4iave ciui nim a liar. A lot of Chicago jgfrla aire' trying to find husbands - ir JSpokane, say the Spokesman-Review, .; Their former hus- oanas, or otner women s nusoands? A couple who havs been spending their honeymoon taking a wedding tour in oojcar, ana oioerwise as tramps, have been divorced. It Is supposed that mejr quo-rrvHra nuuui wno snouia make the fires and the bed, and about the Nothing is more certain than that if uie voie anouia De laxen again the Ke- DUbllcann WOuMn't wtwt r,hamh1,ln United 8tatea senator and would lack iu.uuiL votes or it Pendleton Tribune Probably Brother Geer knows thin nnit " euruuniy aa n aia on me morning ui ma primaries mat nt would H itomiiiaiea tor representative. Oregon SideKgnts A Dallas rat was seen cuttfnir' ofr the seed pods of the popples and carrying them away, and everv once In a whii. wouid stop ana eat a pod, showing the in lununcn xor opiates. - ....... m , . a Iana countv rnmnrln a. terrtfnrw Kn by 150 miles in extent, has 14,000,000, 000 feet of standing timber, the finest waier powers in the state, ana room for bvv.vuu population, says the Register, Albert .Swisher who riled it Alhunv Tuesday, was the nlilat : mull rarrlsr in tne unitea States, say the-Herald. H graduated fiom Brown university in 1856, and was a classmate with Secre taries oi estate uiney. ana Hay. ..... . . .-! V.--.: With indications that tha mim mnv be doubled before the year ends, nearly 180,000 la being spent by private own- vim ia ouirami resiaences in corvalus. mat sum Having etthes been spent or comr&ciea xo oe spent on i structures completed : since.. January . i. now in course of construction, says the Timea Burns Tlmes-TToraM; Thnu wKn mya observing say that every precinct that voted "dry" at the recent election had been receiving more rain than those that went "wet." It had begun to look rather serious, but If this is followed by some Warm 'weather nur arraln ornn iclll be an average yield. , ' y'-- ':. a a :;,.' - '.'.J. 'y!.y:'y Condon 'Times: -There's rying about crop prospects, and that the town has gone lrv. , Thlnaa .nt cendltlon will eventually adjust them selves and promote the growth and prosperity of the home town. Cheer up and look pleasant! Stand up and yell for Condon I There are no Inns tVian thr a, mills and factories of different kinds that are contemplating locating In Ban.: don, says the Recorder, and at least one or two of them are practically as-! SUred for this Claca. Rnnrlnn .ta floKl. wodorbihrenePy?ar,aat,0n WUhln two or tnree years. . .- i - .- Men employed in . road - work, and Strawberry picker tn northern Benton county wer driven . from their work Monday In haste by a shower of bullets which whizzed Uncomfortably, close - to their head and ploughed the earth all around them, fired hv enortamen on th. Willamette river,- ana a resident ay people are frequently annoyed in this way. - . ' - . . Ther Is talk of a new hotel ln Sa lem, and a traveling man said to th Statesman? ' "Every traveling man that makes tbla town u heartily Tn favor of something being done to relieve the present lack of hotet accommodations. I haven't much money, but I am will ing to take 1600 or 1,000 worth of atoc& ln a company to build a good ho tel ln Salem. I have not a dollar's worth of property here and am not in-' terested in. tha town except that I orant a mnA nlaire to atnn vlian T am v, i and am positive that a first-class hotel 8aLBa 'W asceilsci iasss th in'" : -,.... . taittf.ftca. ' . 1 - . il A TwrvDvr txt tactc cmn I I . VAli Jl.LV A XXI A J jJxUU I) John Temple Grave In ' New Tork ' American. it la arter the namingr when the shouting end the tumult die that flow ere will -fade away end the thorne will line the rougher road that leada on to iovnner. , ..,.. , 1 ' For the thorns In the w of Vr Taft are already evident a goodly crop tutu mo convention is planting- new one every hour. The Frovidanoe which la eald to temper the wind to the horn lamb must also bind Its political bur- aen o me Droaa nacK, ana an the heft and girth of "the Ohio man will be needed ror the etrenuoue and extraor dinary difficulties that are before him. Candidate Taft came to the convention a the Republican leader, not In the right of lila strength and popularity, but distinctly as the legatee and Insistent choice of the strongest man the Repub lican party has developed In Its hls- lory. mx-tiovernor oaeu declare he is not the personal choice of 60 out of the 700 delegates who will support him. Good man and popular cltlsen as he la, he is literally to be forced upon; the convention by a will , stronger thaa its own. ... .. 1 may say f rem personal conversation with Republican leaders that most of them) believe In private, what they will not say In public that he is the weakest man trta Renuhlican nartv Ain nreaent at the present time. : . The presidential nominee comes nere handicapped by five distinct and definite lines of opposition. Some of these may I ' .Running Snots k t v " Written for The Journal by Fred C. : i: ,. v . Denton. , One of the ereateat advertisement for Oreson is Its advances In free gov ernment Its material resources and ad vantages are great, but If our booster would say a little more about the power in the hands of the people and how that power assure good government and better conditions In the - future, the boosters would attract more favorable consideration from homeseekers: in the In continually misrepresenting the state to outsiders the great knocker in the brick tower Is a dandv. To read the editorials on the referendum initia tive," recall, direct primary, proportional representation, election oi u; Jntted State senator by the people, etc., amounts to warning to keeD away- from Oregon, for the people are all insane, weak- minded and criminally f Intent on de straying the glorious , federal and state oonstitutlona Loyal Oregonlan people, who are ia the vast majority, do not relish that sort of thing, for It t th wort ort of "knocking.1 Tha Oregon citlsen Is proud of hi reconstructed con stitution, loyal to American lnnmuuuno, and inclined to view with superior con tempt the unfortunate state . that, has not started la to copy after us, Oregon is all right, constitution a amended, oil, climate and prospect.. Cities looking for revenue with which to make uo for . tbe: saloon ; licenses should consider the empty lot In many places the empty lot ha been treated with distinguished consideration by the local assessora' -This party 1 not of cave are not necessary to human haruntl yu know him well and from that any particular use to a town; does notlplness until some man by astute ad-1 time on he. will hold less and less of mum,' un ' luwii, gruciaur . lunuiu, values iiae a' sponge, , ana neips out ni local enterprise, .it taxea a mue more In accordance with Its actual value it cannot run away ana migni. d maae 01 soma use in consequence. . Oregon hag honest men, and, tha at tempt on the part of the supporter of the discredited and dilapidated Repub- lican machine to prove that grafters are the only kind we can send to the legis- lature doe not meet with. utcess. The will of the people. may not wit tne 01a Kuaru m,i ,o uuto .ratuncu china to victory and the public trough. but Oregon expect every man to do hi auiy 10 m ieBiaiure. v;v : i 4 Had the renr,la voted down the re0-l iStiSf hitPZPmhfiT. f 1h?nie;iat,T?e vote for the popular choice for United Stater senate? tbe claim would have were Meiby the To", of the peo . J.r: -uii. :.i-rtilx -1 " t"". .wl l.X - " I ceTvea thVsmsll proposition on the ballot, it would p- pear as if It wa the duty of every m.n.K., nf ,h loo-lalatnra tA vnta art. cording to the will of th people and give Chamberlain a tinanimou vote on 1 tne'nxst oaiiot. wny noil 1 , ; a .. . a 1 The recent Republican national con- ventton ws a far removed from thejthan it 1 today -:, . . .7. " I neonie as the ureson state convention. 1 Both were opposed to election ot United States senators by the peopla and both Somtnated by the politician. . , " t .Air At.t tn itnarvrnnnrl attanVa nn thelnltlatlve. j 1 A a faf frier he eecond place en the O. O. P. elephant i filled by a past master in the art. j f . 1 In Denver some v delegate will b thirsty If they do not stand In with Tammany with it carload of Iced fit. Th nannla nf central Orefi-On who are building a railroad . of their own miy be blurting, cut tney are on me rigiu track, and Will be on a railroad track If Hutches of New Tork will com to Oregon we will give him a few pointers onBow "to bring" a legislator fo time. The people do Jt here. . t. T t " ' I isnouia xne npuguvnn uariy u re-1 turned .to power, doe anybody suppose I tha tariff . will be renovated o you could tell ltr 1 . . , 1 ' " " " . I Renresentatlv Sherman Of New Tork I a chairman of the judiciary committee ha killed more bills in congress than I any man living or aeaa. - is 11 pobbioiq that he is solmr to kill another political Bill by running with biro for vlc-prel- dent? . r : i . 5 ' ' . Sereno E. Payne's Pirthdajr. , I sentativ tn Congrei. of the Thirty-r.t 2isViA ? SZZnZSflh V a?Ia Uri5 I. 184S, In Hamilton; N. T. At art early age hi family jernoved with him to Auburn andhe ha ince made that city hi J home,.: - He was graduated from th u 1. 'a w .. i.Tiii u ; wjJi h mltted totb bar ln 18. H s first pub- burnrwhioh heU.d from 18681871. 1 1 r 1 Tl fa WH BX 1 1 1 L a. ) 1 UIIT U1CI SSv lya. A.U I uuae.iuoiiuy. w , , vJV":- "'i presiaentiai six and waiting for lnf.ir ylsor, district attorney, and meoer J mation. Without reflecting on the cau Jn.?oa2. f e?Uh?K 0nHrtJJ PhSi dldate, we should say that the mystery !. S'M'fKiUS rM'-an.. il8" ot o his adfantage. been reelected biennially ever alnce, with the exception or on term. Mr. Payne wa a member of the- British and American Joint high commission In 1899, and as- a member of the committee on wars and means be helped to frame th fioSlhlS? anTthe' Igtnce 1S he has I ways and means c : uingicy tanri Dins, been chairman of the way and means committee and one of the recognized Republican leaders of th house of representatives. He is ft close friend of speaker cannon and during the legislative session the two usually leave the. capltol together and stroll down Pennsylvania avenue arm in arm when tne nay wora ia aon. , This Da'te In History. 1758 Louisburg taken by the English under Amherst. . . 1830 William IV uCcedel t George IV in ungiana. v- -- 1849 British :. navigation act pealed. .' 1 - tr rr mr, a v A f 1 , . .-,.. 1 1 Vir.tnl. lsoa uenerai tr ope . assignea 10 in (uinii I died. Born March 8, 1799. 1893 The Chicago anarchist par-1 doned bv Governor Alt geld of Illinois. ihd international council or women met ih London. - 1907 In- the British house-, of com mons a resolution ln favor of curtailing power -at, tiw Jiiwe of lord not be well founded In logio, but they are Just as effective In fact, and will De at the pons as potential as even leas er reasons have been In time past against candidates just as great. The handicaps which the war secretary prouent to umcago are! First The labor Injunction ' decision made when he was a United States dls trlct judge. . So far nothlne- that Mr. Taft or Mr. Roosevelt has said or done has satisfied the labor element of the country as to his position in this case. Second The opposition of the negro voter, growing out of the Brownsville incident as militant today . aa It was In 1 December. - - Third The distinct if not generally understood opposition of the great Jew ish race because of bis cordial visit to and his subsequent eulogy of the czar ui nuaaia, unaer wnose autocratic rule tnetr countrymen Buffered the unspealc able atrocities of Klahlneff. ' Fourth The Memorial day allusion to me resignation or uenerai Urant rrom the army because f his drinking habit This allusion, however lllosrlcal. has stirrea the open opposition of the Grand army posts, and is likely to hurt the Republican candidate as surely as Blaine was Injured by Burchard's manlsm and Rebellion." ., ,mt Fifth Tha lndestruntlhla. Mm, that ha is "another man's man" the legatee of tha president, the executor ct another mans policies, and ,. practically the forced nominee of the national conven- non. A Forgotten Wonder. t7p to about 1870 the Mammoth Cave In Kentucky, was well advertised, aay l',lb.,?rt Hubbard in The Philistine. A I. J.0 u wa considered a sort of finishing touch to one education, and gntlv about it sociefv M tndln ln P"l ' ' , oiTurua epi me Mammotn uav no-1 w from tne time-It was opened, in 1837,1 ,wune in piace was peingixaat ne aoes not keep; : wno is uuveruaea in various way the num. nor or visitor wa many tin is -now, when the publicity promoter Know u not in 1844, for lnatanoe, r"?n. W"9 population wa less than -.vvv,Vvv, ,.,w.uv, mm . ov wan mil lion of today, those "who cam to see me natural curiosity numbered on an average ta a day. They traveled hun d' and thousand of milesfor many crossed the Atlantic to behold it, Slxtv. one years later in 105 the average m jeaa man aosen a aay,, , . The pubile simply ha been permit ted to forget that Kentucky's Ham- moth Cave exists. The man who owned if died in 1869, and his 18 heirs, c:it tered all over the country, simply de voted themselves to spending the In come that they derived from the . 13 a head admission fee. They thought the financial stream would keep. on I running without any expenditure ' on I their part for advertising. They have! ""n uisappoiniea, or course. ' As soon a the advertising wa aban doned the people became Indlfrerent about the cave, and finally it figured iiw ivuger aa one ox me great now piace 01 me wona. In wis lanffiia n . Th thll1.H. 1 veriiamg.i iius men ana Women With a oesire to see them, and when the advertising ceases the desire cease also. Knew What They Were About. , From Collier' Wwklif 1 Great Unwashed 1 ur" TW",t . . ' i' ., majority, however, la increasing a supply of bathrooms, and likewise TtlA M.in.11. . . .. . L , , . It . uppiy or comprehension. u will not take a great many elec- in,im um me recent .one in Oregon to I clinch tha l.t. that . h. nnT. ... j likely to (elect better Senators than the Btat7 esiaiature have been accustomed 1 10 elect. 'nax anew wnat tney wer doing wnen 4hey made a Democrat governor They Knew ln aJn "m ,tht Save to Mr. nlarlt' . ,. han .They knew what they "wer doing the other, da v when thav mimrta m P)u,?,,Kii. can leslalaturai and intr,,ta it YJiZZ Democrat to the senate: '" vnmiriara is in aina or man wno ougnt to ne in the senate, and (the CeODle of Oregon hat, rlnno Ihan. aelye .proud In voting with freedom "" neroea party catua. . utouoh 01 ino people mere un uuuiMi,uijr wouia oe a numoer or aema- that tha a vera nT7M V.uKrri-Kstock .. rin., .k . , . 1 not be reelected from lnnsvTai.ia WJ T should inrobablv at"ben an.rad thV Spectacle of Plaft and C.w !2 iiririv, .nrftv.fmn.. - ' if..,t Rhode Island. . -! rjf,iini . . ai- ..ti I preeenc r -v They ar rather rapidly deciding that there are a number of matters which iii .wu,, yrvnj wen inem- selves. Mr. Sherman's Nomination. : From th Chicago Record-Herald Ran.) 1. mereiy staling in lac l s to say that If James S. fiherman had Wn S a . r , mentionea ror the vice-presidency ln loud, resounding tones a few weeks ago me wnoie west wouiit unva timb and asked politely, -"Who 1 James S. Bher- manr , . : ; - tha't -Th.rS'V.." to fceSui nominating Mr. Sherman exi was the aon rlamanrlrt h It Is merely stating the fact to add 1 . reason, ror xrent that ha was the son rlem&nrlixt hv tha aontlit. men wno naa oeen run over dv tne great steam roller. The arrangement were all mad . beforehand, as was evident from tn- proceedings in the convention. out tney were not all cut and (dried. "Unci Joe" falrlv trwmhlerl with mn- tlon aa he made his speech seconding tha nomination of Mr. Sherman, who is or in , stanapat . variety of statesman hln. v. ...... . Whether tha nomination was good Jpolitic or not tiro will tell.-- At ''prev ent w not it an exhibition of tli moianini - nf such gatherings. Thers 4 S'nVS P.alll.1y,;th majority of the delegates from an the states were not deeply nf- faca because their knowledge 0 the candidate wa but little more thorough an(J Compreheniv than that of tbe pub- .""r were carrying out tne agree- mcnt that had been for them . Vwrm tkA . 1 II. ak ..U1I. .a,ji oV"wondr.ng',lf ' Mr 'shern. of 3Iarvelons Instinct of s Cat. rrom the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.1 The marvelous instinct of an animal l said to sometimes be a sure warning of impending danger. It seems to be the esse or tne pet cat or the steamer City of Kingston. This animal, a large yel low on of no particular recommendation except Us burrlnjf proclivities, ha long been attached to that-vessel, and not even the most persuasive coaxing could Induce It to leave the confine of the ship. - It ha never been known to miss a trio. When the Kingston arrived In Seattle from Victoria early Sunday morning, for some mysterious reason the feline went ashore, and when the time came for the departure fdr Taeoma, which resulted In the disaster to the Kingston, the animal refused to be coaxed aboard. Finally, a saucer of milk proving unavailing, one of the ship' crew took the cat tn his arm and carried It aboard the vessel. but just a th line wer hauled in and the steamer was leaving the dock the -"" juh aupanar irom m, iving- ston to the wharf and disappeared ln a pile' of bags. It Is now-alive and the i admiration of all hands at Yesler wharf. Several large Douglas county farms have recently been divided up and are peuig aoiu in amaii tract.. lheREAUl I Men Worth Avoiding. : T HE Veteran Wall street magnate. Henry Clews, ha written a book entitled "Fifty Tear of Wall Street,' a volume ; : containing -. much good advice to young men. In a list of men who are good to avoid , air. t;ews enumerates: - t "Avoid a man who vilifies hisbenefae- ' tor: who unjustly accuses others of bad " deeds; who never has a good word for anybody: who. when he drinks, habit- ; ually drinks alone; who boasts of the en- fieriority of his family; who talks re igion downtown in connection with hi dally busineas affairs; who talks reck- : lessiy against the virtue of resectable- women: who runs in debt with no ap parent Intention of paying; who bor rows small sums on his not or check dated ahead; who will not work for an nonesc living; wno iooks aown upon those who do; who is always prating t, w, i , kl, w ..I.,.,.,.. Imniit., k. A ' I motives to those trying to do good; who I uwiiajm tuiiiiueiwc. wuv lit, wiiu is honest only for policy's sake; who de ceives his wife and boasts of It to oth- era; who chew tobacco in a public con- , veyanoe: who set intoxicated in nubile places; who partakes of hospitality and talks behind his entertainer's back: who , borrows money from, a friend and then , blackguard thaiender." -v This 1 not a bad Hat for a girl to cost i In her memory book, although it seams somewhat superficial and to be mora largely concerned with manners thanr : with morals. What Is that "Pinafore" . stanca "Though I'm anything but clev er. I could talk like that forever." It Is an Interesting kind of composition. Avoid a young man who spends all he 1 who be ieves that all men stay straight only because they are afraid j to do otherwise; who thinks a girl will give up respectability for him lr h should ask her; , who makes promise Isea lavish with other people's money and stlngv un nis own; wno manes a practice ot going continually with one girl until tie thinks he has won her affections and then switches off to another: who is cynical -about honor and virtue; who prides himself on being a very bold, bad man; who thinks being sophisticat ed is being distrustful and tough. . Oood thing to avoid. It Is trus. and an application of thera to any young man wno seen ner company ia not a baa idea, but if a girl will look into tho matter of character, reading' a little more closely, she will be able to do with a less burdensome list of sign and ac complish " the same purpose,- that of choosing her friend J. more easily, j -. T k. al-.) .-.II . whose lives are not founded on the old well established standards, of truth, clean living, sobriety and absolute hon esty, A man with these things so es sential a part of his character that you cannot think of him without having them brought prominently before you, will do to tie to. H will not disap point you, and as time goes On you will love him more and more. . A man lack ing any one of these thing may be ever bq attractive for a little while,. I Jr iwra unui you cannot tning ot I nlm witnout contrasting hi weakness I with another man's strength. It Is a vital matter enona-h. that of choosing one's friends, or one life mate v ana a gin nasangni to consider 11 care xuiiy ana soDeriyi Mr, Clew's suggestions may serve f Indices, but when a girl gets the toue' stone of dependable nees in her mind s'.. will not need hi finger posts.. '.tV.SV it , : Economy In the Ilonschold. O PREVENT waste In cooking, writes " Mra Rorer. and keep the market - Ing bills down, the housewife must truly be mistress of the kitchen; she must understand the best methods ef aeiecnng ana purcnasmg materials, una can not Correct the cook for wasteful- net in cooking, and criticise the dlnhea. "h J w" vr"f.d '""L" il f ood prallcaT'eook book or a household I Kulde will enable ner to know the best methods of msklns out bills of fare, rid Km ,te,lch h,r h?7!L to v ta th pur- chaslns and cook in a. in America, to be sure, we are averse to anything that seems like economy. In our mind we confound economy, which means . culture, with penurious ness, which Is really extravagance, keep- ing th bones and the carcasses of chick k en ana turkey and using them for ; save many dollar In th course of the year. - A houewlfe recently told me tnai sue wouia not want ner serv- ant to know that b was "mean nough to save bones." , v Und,r uch i circumstance th gen- -The housewife who brag that "she iWJnJ ,IZ L' CZU and allow her cook or her maid to manage her f house, -houldhav have the abil tty to select a trained woman, and have the purse to pay her. : ( A ri urtii ul want jn cooaing may,i be avoided If the bills of fare ar mada out a week in advance, and th ordering; 1 don twice a week. Th greatest waste comes from ordering at 10 o'clock th food .which I to be cooked at 12; or having the maid set un an hour earlier. because she imist market 'for bresltfaat. i Ordering atTthe last ' moment, and only a snort time eerore meals, is the most extravagant method of living. Cheap .. fileces of meat require long, slow cook ng: the quick "order-meat" must be-, high priced and tender. And it must be remembered that thia meat contatna rto . more body building material thaa do tbe cheaper piecea . - i v Housewives who have studied the art Of housekeeping from the modern stand point will agree -with me that meal, ar ranged ln course reduce the cost of living, are more easily cooked and served, and very much more easily di gested. A soup, a meat with two veg- -etablea and a salad form a complete daily dinner, and one need not change th routin when there are guests. . ... as si m The Dally Menn. " Cantaloupe. , Cereal. Ham and Egf a CotTea Halibut en Coqullle. Wn"o!e Wheat ; Munins. Ktiubarb and Fig jam. - . . -Cookies. -1 . Tea. v - : y . . niN'witti ; : -' : Vegetable Soup, pot Roast of Besf. Sliced Tomatoes. ---, .., , - Lettuce, French pressing. Strawberry Shortcake.- Cof faa . Halibut en . Coo ui lies Take, two pounds of cold boiled or baked fish, . free It from skin and bones, and cut It into tiny die. Put a tablespoonful of butter into a frying pan, and set over the fire to heat. Peel and chnn one ' doxen mushroom, put with the butter, and stir until bpown; season with salt, black, pepper, a dash of cayenne,, a . squeese of lemon juice and a little . grated nutmeg. Mix well, and add six tablespoonf ula of melted butter sauce: - add the fish. . Butter some china shells, fll) them with the mixture, and 'place in a steamer over boiling water until heated through, Sprinkle the tops with the . sieved yolk of hard boiled eggs and the finely chopped whites. Arrange' on a dlstt, and' garnish with thin slice -ef lemon.- - Rhubarb and Fla- Jam Six nounda of rhubarb, five nnunda of auvar. one - pound bf figs and one lemon. Cut the rnunaro, witnout peeling, ln naif lncn v..-, slices and turn the eugar over It Let ' stand three or four hours, then place over the fire, add the juice and grated . rind of the lemon, and the figs chopped. ' Simmer two hours, seal ln glass jars. This la nice to eat with cold meat or ' bread and butter and for filling In tarts. Strawberry Shortcake Three cup of -flour, one teaspoon salt and three tea spoons of baking powder, sifted 1 to gether. Rub In half cup of butter and mix with 1H cups of sweet milk. Bsk -In sheet half an houV (do not roll). To prepare it Individually, cut the short- '" cake ln squares, after it Is done, open each on,e, put In generous piece of butter . nd a spoonful of mashed and sweet ened berries or prepared fruit, aso a spoonful over top, and serv i with ' whipped cream. . tv i , ,. A A A