V Jar.;.,.. k"0-:--p:;-v- V V EKT0M FAGE OF TUB elOTOil? fflEm$- THE JOURNAL AK ' INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. ft , JACKSON.... PuhlUnrr I'uhllahea tfwr nomine (rxrent nunflaj) and every Sunday morning at Tim Journal llollJ In. Fifth sod Yamhill atrei'ts, PoMlnrid, Or, 1 Knti'rul at tha Bnstofnee at Portlmid. Or, for trurwmUalon, through tli mailt at, if-oml niu jrEf.KPHONKS MAIN 7173. HOME, Adffil. All departments reached hr thee nan)ir. 3'ii tne operator the ilrpartwont you warn. Kaet Side office. H 244-4 . Et MO. IwHElGN ADVERTISING RBPBKSESTAT1VK .Vrerlandnnjnmln Special Adrwtlalnf Arpn.-r. - ranwics Ifllliniitj. ZZ nrin HTemiP. , Vorfc; 100T-U8 ltojce HulMlnir. Chlraso. Bnbeerlptten Ttrmi by null or to anr adilreaa IB tb Culted Statu, Canada or Mexico. - ' " '" ' DAILY. . PM .re... SS.OO I Oho month $ .80 . - ''-. SI N DAY. tin,, year 12.50 I One month t .23 DAILY A NT SUNDAY. On year .$7.80 I One month f .05 C ---- The best and bravest of men have moments of doubt and of weakness, but if they , are the best and the bravest, they rise from their depres sion by recurring to 'first fundamental principles tha the universe is wisely ordered and every man is a part of It, Marcus Aurelius. It no and no law that Insures Juetlc? and equity for the minority holder of railway and other corporate property and upholds their rights, should ever be allowed to become a dead letter. The poor must he protected as well us the rich, and speculative bandits clieok rnati'd. Yaiit foituni'8 han been 'made by trick and device lm this and kindred ways, an 1 our recent panic, that in volved such vld spread disaster to the country nt laiK', iindi -upled the weultn of some nf niir capitalists who sold stocks mill bonds heavily at Huh price. broad land, that produces all that it sr., 000, 000 people need, and yet has 1(10,000,000 bushels or more to send Khro.id every year to less favored peoples. " A hard-working, perspiring time is the harvest time, though loss so than II used to be. when cradles and hand rakes and horse-power threshing ma chines were the only implements in use; yet if the crops were fair, it was a merry rather than a sad soason for the reward of the year's toil was THE FILIPIVOS' FLEA. t TT WAS a very unreasonable and should be an impressive and ef- I fectual ;plea that the. Filipinos ., made n July 4 to the great na tion whose subjects they are sub jects denied the privileges of citizens. They ask for free trade -with the . -United States, of which they are a .political part, the same as Hawaii and Porto Rico have. On account of , tha ilgh tariff taxes, both the com merce , and the agriculture of the Islands languish. They cannot pros per as they might and should be cause the United States, while de- ' privlng them of all political power .Jto act for themselves, still treats them in the matter of customs taxa ; tlon as a foreign country. This is art anomalous injustice which the Filipinos clearly perceive, but real- Jzjhgf their helplessness they couch their plea for Justice in mild and conciliatory terms. 1 They know it would do no good to threaten; It , would be Impolitic even to complain Jiarshly; so they diplomatically speak with the humility or Jialpless crea tures, And what prevents the granting of . their request? It would not injure this great country, on the contrary would benefit it. The president is in favor of granting this Just plea of - "The Filipinos; so is Mr. Taft, who knows the Philippines thoroughly; eo are nearly all the real patriotic Btatesmen of both parties; but the fjigar trust and the tobacco trust ob . ject. Free trade with the Philip " f pines might In course of time so de velop the. sugar, tobacco and hemp Industries in the islands that it " -would affect In some small degree the trusts now controlling those products' and their manufactures in this country; hence the edict of these "trusts goes forth to congress that there must be no free trade with the Philippines. And these trusts are ; seconded and backed by all the oth ers for they stand together, all for each and each for all. And congress legislates, in any test matter like this, tcfrthe protected trusts and not s. or the rest of the people. .The Filipinos can depend on either ' Mr, Taft or Mr. Bryan, as president, to do what he can to secure commer- clal justice for thm, but the out look; as to desired action by con gress is not bright. There are too many trust-serving members of con gress, especially of the senate, and just before the panic and bought us m iasi oeing securea; me season or heavily nt the bottom azures. fruition had come These men, w ho profited bo largely by Before the wheat came the barley tho panic and the sunsc.iurnt ritte in an(j aftpr tne wjlcat tho oat and stocks, naturally did nom ns to prevent ,ater Btl fc or n ligute the panic. Jhiy secretly I .. ... ... welcomed It ss an engine of destruction We" OUt f the Wfl'- the Corn- that f0r to market vaiuc-H. and they were there- 'pars Pnst has been America's great- for- public enemies. Some of them OBt and most valuable crop. How of have a voice In the control of large ten do we denizens of cities think Of banking Institutions and largo Industrial how all the rest of the people of the corporations, and In their corporaU ca- WOrld depend UDOn those who KO paclty th.-y might easily oe as reaay i forth jn due eeason to plant and to their Individual capacity. If It promised ""V VTk .v , w" . ,... ...ki nirr,!. h.ir the hay, and the other crops? It. is wnauh they who, working for their own live- Appetite grows with what it feeds lihood, keep all the rest of the world upon, and Aie eagerness of many of our I alive. rich men to become still richer Is al most a craze. They fix their eyes on the Astors, the Vanderbllts, the Rocke fellers and the Goulds, and point to Carnegie and to Frlck and, among- the dead, to Russell Sage and Marshall Tleld. They envy their richer brethren their great wealth, and some via with, TROUBLE IN MEXICO. T BRYAN AS A BOSS. I HE uneasy elements of Mexico, hereditary insurrectionists, have become irrepressibly rest less If-nrier thn lanor nrosMAntr and aim to equal U not surpass them in wh,ch ,g tfc dictatorship, of adding to their riches by hook or by .v i d unci; LU lua&u IIUUU1V during the rest of his life, and still that Mammon is their rod, and money more when he has gone. For several the Ultima Thuie of all their efforts, years politicians who were suffering desires and ambition. from various kinds and decree nf These remarks were not made by disappointments have been foment- a aemagogue, a socialist, or a rau- mg revolutionary sentiments. Diaz ical, but by an eminently safe and has succeeded in buildine ud a sane" financier, whose opinions the strong government, but he could not average banker and business man satisfy everybody, and the mal- respect. Mr. Clews seems to have no contents' have recently been aided by doubt that the panic was precipitated comparatively hard times. One of or encouraged by certain possessors Diaz' strategic policies early in his of "swollen fortunes," and he be- presidency was the conversion of lieves that it is the duty of the busi- banditti into national militia; 'ru ness world to protect itself against rales," but this element cannot be their unconscionable combinations depended on always to support the and panic-producing operations. I government. These soldiers are illiterate, semi-savage, poor, and but slightly paid, and constitute "a can of gasoline in Ahe house of Mexico." T IS CHARGED that .Bryan Is a Diaz has jrfade a great ruler for poss, a dictator wno armirarny Mexico, nut has done things with controls the Denver convention, which fault can be found with show But it may be replied that Bryan of reason. The most Indefensible of has no power aside from his own f these have been the prohibitive tar- merits to compel the delegates ' to iffs that he has established'fpr the nominate him. The criticism that benefit of hjs 'political arid personal might be made of Bryan is that while friends ajid supporters rather than of professing that he desired to leave the country? adapting our protec the matter of the nomination wholly I tive system and the placing of some to the people, the "rank -and file, he of his relatives in very lucrative po has been very actively working to se-lsitlons. But he has made Mexico cure the nomination and has seemed through many' yiars, a stable, safe to act as though he thought no one and respected state, and probably the else had a right to do the same. I main cause of the insurrections now Bryan would have occupied a less J Is not so much the faults that he has vulnerable position if he had kept en-J committed as his inability to satisfy tlrely quiet, and made no effort the growing horde of politicians for whateverfor the nomination though in Mexico or any Latin American that would have been a very difficult I country nearly everybody fit for any- role for him to play. But if "he has (thing wants to hold a public position. seemed over-zealoua in his own be- But as long as the president can half, it may be said that there is Ho keep thte army faithful, he will be doubt that the 'rank and file" able to subdue the insurrectionists, throughout most of the country are for Diaz holds the purse and is abso lute master not only of all executive departments of government, but oj congress also yet lm mediately after his death. xu not before, Mexico ,1s likely to revert for awhile to a tate of disorder and rapine, and to expe rience a series of revolutions. These may be averted by a dictator even stronger and wiser than Diaz, but such men are scarce. striving for real democracy, as a sub stitute, in part at least, for the pure ly but exceedingly Impure represen tative system; but it docs not follow at all, as the shortsighted Pendleton brother snpposes, that they therefore have to vote for everything and everybody tagged "Democrat." Dem ocracy is a good deal blggor and broader than the Democratic party, Small Change Nice place for a vacation Portland -v Pea breesca and mountain breeies both near. More than ever. Bryan 1 the bosr- ot tne situation. What busted trust did the Renublioan convention point to with prldeT m Judte Grav declines to add color to the CHmptln by accenting tbe nomina tion for vice-president. But stray Is too uoubirui a color anyway. How can that presidential candidal who is in Jail be expected to tun well? But Milt Miller has vlalted Bryan. and Bryan baa visited him. by J1"- Did the Prohibitionists let loose that riood around airview, near Lincoln, IN6D. 7 "It always comes with uromer." la tne title or a new song, xea, the do re wno asK3 everynoay ne meets every' body knows what. Here, this won't do: no daily reoort of what Roosevelt la worklnsr'at. Surely the harvest ia not over, and the oord- wood all cut, .round Oyster Bay. Candidate Sherman's opinion of bllary calculi is probably about 'the same as the late General Sherman's opinion of war. , ' So far a tlcWet of Bryan and Ryan seems not to bave been even proposed. Bryan did not exnect to carry Colo nel Guffey's state, anyhow or did her The normal .school question is still a long- way from being settled. . .. ' C j Well, if arty one, doesn't know what a Democrat Is, We suppose all he has to ao is to as& w. J. B.T ". . If Herman Rldder can ahow that he can get the "Dutch? vote, put him- on. Toung Rockefeller has absorbed enough American Ice company stock to send the price up -from $9 to $60 a share. Next fall he may tell his Sun day school that poor people deserve a speii or neii m tne summer time. FRANK DAVEY RECITES SOME PO- ' LITICAL HISTORY undoubtedly for him, and he knows it, and all he has been working for was to see that the delegates really represented the people. At Chicago the case was different for the convention was to a great ex tent under the control of federal of fice holders. Appointees of the president to federal positions were numerous in the convention and the shadow of the Big Stick hung over it ominously. None of the "allies" had a fair chance, for the immense pat ronage power of the government was used tor all it was worth In behalf of Roosevelt's favorite. Bryan has no such power as this; he has had no the people of the country, the vot- patronage to bestow upon men whose ers, are alone in position to bring , "pernicious activity" would be A' DEMOCRACY AND PARTY. about a change, to oust the trusts from congress and install them selves instead, through election of their chosen representatives. MR. CLEWS OX HIGH HXAXCE. winked at if not commanded; he could call no great "federal brigade to his aid. Except for these, Taft could not have been nominated on the first ballot, if at all; without these, Bryan will probably be nom inated on the first ballot, if not by acclamation. IT IS THE HARVEST TIME. N' IN A RECENT address to the bank ers of Maine, Henry Cltwp, the venerable New York banker, pointed iUt the clanger of vast Combinations of capita! that give those who i'oi.toI it power over tho business tiffnirs of the country, and to brine ru v.i-ilc at their pleas ure. Such : cr nibinatlon. he said, gives tl e !:irrr financial institutions and mnli'i:,. fir,Hlref an opportunity to add gr--it !y their vast weal'h, with disastrous results to thousands and even millions of toplt. Such was the case In 1907, and Mr. Clews aid that the situation allows of this -being done again and on a larrpr cale, and he argued that such a con spiracy Should be guarded against as much ai possible by both federal end stats legislation. Continuing, realism; the second but who rould r. viewi iaia. I construct a third of an epic out of in our ranway history. Instances too I chica . out of California. have occurred' ' i o v,.. "Tk Epic of the Wheat" shpuld not be In OW comes for the wheat raisers, in northern .latitudes, the bur den and heat of the year-day. Heavy or light, good or poor, the crop that goes so far toward feed Ins the world, is ready for the har vest. And therein 1 is many an un told story, many an unpreached ser mon. Frank Norrls, cut off ere he reached full flower, conceived in trilogy "The Epic of the W heat," but did not live to complete it. The first story, "The Octopus," proved his marvelous talent and Industry, and established Us fame, though it was too darkly clouded with pessimistic (nmerous to mention wher unscrupulous speculative capl--taHsta fcT combined t force the fon elomr ! of railways that but for tbelr maCBlnaUona would have ben able remain solvent. They were, however. tnt Otj th robbery of the Innocent and eiYnseleM bowShoMera and stock- hol4rs by forcing Ui roaa Into bank ruptcy ao that they could, at the forc tlowr themBelTca furctiasc, by a aingta told, without a CQtr.pctlng fcldde'r, a roa4 wits all ita tHonatnga. frwn cMae and. a4nrlt!eai for a nominal turn Thta was generally, about oc qtrarter tt lha actual eoat of lb ptverty. and t: minority Internet, bating KattT4 r4 rak. ea4 99 anear. to' boy or pro tect it Tkf wra tbe Jctlme cf a j?f4 wrong. ' full re"rr. nrrtr? cover of tbe law, t' t r-?e iraeo!t:e ia the fv-.-, . .' : m uc t a tt-tafiy mads large part merry instead of tragical, and bave a triumphant rather than a despairing tone. Now, on the lighter and thinner Soils, of the great Columbia Baln, where wheat ia grown, the harvest Is under way. and the Teaplng will work farther back toward the moun tains and north up to and across the lino daring several wpka to com. Ia the eastern and middle western states the wheat harvest Is also on. bat on tbe great plains of North Da kota at4 iu British neighbor to the aorth, th heads will eontlnas to fall ad.fce shelled 'until Ifcs rond frse aM snows fall. Great is this an Baal nmcricj cf tl wheat la this ROSEBURO man recently wrote a very readable letter to The Journal, agreeing, with a spice of facetiousness, with the prop osition that all those who voted for' Chamberlain are Democrats; but he went on to show that he meant that not only they but the voters general ly who voted for the new laws and reform measures were Democrats that Is, adherents of democracy as a political system rather than, -of a party. In the course of this tfue and thoughtful letter he said: "We have only to note the large majority in favor or the amendment to Jhe constitution, making it cofn puisory for the members of the leg islature to vote for the 'people's choice for United States senator, to know that the people aye demo cratic." He used the word democratic In its generic and not its particular sense, as he did for the most part thr6ughout his letter, but the Pen dleton .Tribune, with Its eyes so glned to party that it cannot look be yond, above or -aside from party, supposes that the Roseburg map. had reference merely to the Democratic party, and says: "There can be no greater test of a state's political stains than Its direct expression as to Its preference for a felted State senator whether he hall be a Democrat or a Repub lican." And the Pendleton paper goes on to reiterate that aty men who voted for Chamberlain, and also most of those who voted for tha re call proportional representation, and thftatatement No. 1 law, are Demo crats, that Is, adherents of the Demo cratic party. How this can be so bea a large proportion of them voted tor Hawley and Ellla. and Republican candidates generally, Is not ex-plained; i The trouble with tha Pendleton or gan Is that It cannot pereelva that the people can move forward toward more of aid better democracy with out neceeaarUy voting tV straight Democratic ticket on all occasions. Great numbers of.. Repiblicans are The people , of , Omaha drink 68.000 pounds of rijud lnA their , daily water, says a paper of th& olty. It ought t'o oe easy ioe tuinoEU ana -one to oe a real estate agent in Omaha. It would b almokt 'worth jutting a prohibition plank ia the Democratic platform to read-what Henry- Watter- son wouiq say ttDOU.t It. ' a - The best jobs are always looking out for the men best prepared to do them. Who says the Democratlo party doa amount to nothln'? Why, ft'a on that lirst page ot every newspaper m the country just now... , . t. ' K In mercy to a long-suffering world, won't somebody marry vt hat fellow Sagan to the Gould mlfllbrfs and "Sft. if he will keep quiet a few days? . - ' y aK-1 ' P -t- "To hell with the $ont1tutioh,'' Is a statement over the headquarters' f a teaiue society. tsat why should the members want the constitution down there, If they don't like it here? Judge Van Zante starts out as If he meant to use magisterial discrimination in his infliction of penalties something neeaea on mat Dencn. a mSoiti of the Oreeon delee-atlnn tn Tien. ver have kicked against Milt Miller. wanting nearly all the honors in sight. But wait till Bryan makes him secre tary of state, ana then he. will have no uSe for these small honors. . " w , Oregon Sidelights Two Myrtle. Creek teot)lft have rained ripe, gooa lemons. TTnrlati iha Viaolnir 'THr XKT m. Ww t the Harney Vnlloy News, wliose editor is ex-tpeaker Frank, Davey, says ; The News does , not propose to stand aa the champion of any wing or faction of the Republican partv aa opposed to any.ptner vwlng or Taction, its political mission being, so far aa ita nower may lie, to iironiiMe the best Interest and th success of tbe party as a whole, bellov lng as we do that the beat good of thi nation depends upon the existence of tne ttepuDiican party in control oi ai- laira. yes to the danger with which the party in Oregon Is threatened through what we believe to be a mistaken line of ac tlon and argument pursued by leading iniiuences in .its management ana Dy ine system or abuse, sarcasm ana raise hood heaned UDon Individuals and classes upon whose votes the party must depend for success, and we feel that it la time to review the cast, cor rect some erroneous impressions lately given, out and call a halt to the gen tlemen who are driving honest. Inde pendent men to alliances outside the party ranks. The defeats which have come to the Republican party In Oregon are now charged by certain newspapers to Mr. Mourne. Mr. U'Ren. statement No. 1. the primary law and the initiative and referendum, all of which measures and men are cursed unmercifully and in dtscrlminately. A retrospective glance over tne past 12 years snows that tne blame" Is wrongly placed. Vacillation, inconsistency, insincere promises and platform utterances gave to the people of the state the first suggestions of oeslred changes In the political system. Some of these changes were placed upon the statute books of the state without any intention of putting them in-'operaion unless times ana circum sances favorable to the boases should appear, otherwise they were to be treat ed aa a legal joke played upon the com mon herd. And It waa for Bourne, or U'Ren, or Schuebel, who began this movement for popular lesialatlon. elec tion of senator, etc., but It waa the very Influences and the very men who ?re now abusing U'Ren, Bourne, et al or the results. In 1895 and 1896 the leading men who re the loudest now In the abuse of Bourne atid others were the most ar dent advocates bf the bimetallic heresy. and they laid the groundwork then for all the Ills which the party has suffered since. The same Influences operating In Multnomah, Clatsop, Marlon ana Lane counties, followed tip later with combinations with the Democrats where by legislative majorities were seoured i 1 REALM FEMININE A I ' ., Ourselves and Destiny. " THOUGHT that oris carries away from .Robert Mantell'a Shakes pearean Interpretations. partic ularly that of Macbeth, Is the In evltableneaa pf ' nion'a destiny, till WAS I t'lcvu ui iivi nowniivpavv, J y iivi dry one act snut out from the beautiful things li.rHll "r. a mocaery ana a oy-wora among " ...t2 careless men, both are the fulfilling of ... . . ' UA nil In 191)1 thlnklnir that the. tidal wave of popularity was flowing In their ravor, ine same men piacoa w uj.uu ,U)p statute books embodying in solemn legat text tne run principles ot omm munt No. 1, which now appears so hate fnl tn hm l.r ua rtvea list of Tne atata unalnn ..who formulated and vntaH a, that luw tt9 thai aalentlon Of I UnjaeyTstates senators by popular vote, tha discovery that a 'Jtiias career is in order to Illustrate wnat we mean, hlmseir, worked out. -.it Is his prcdoml- and It was the very first bill introduced natJnjr charaoterlstte. translated .,lnto Adams' of" Marlon. Brownell of Clacka- and blind. And it is not only-trua mas, Cameron of Jackson. Clem (Dem.) of the largo characters of fiction, nut or unn, DimmicK or uoos, iiunt oi oniy the thought 6f a' poet, but be Multnomah, In man (Dnm.) of Multno-L.,,.. t. .,V..j t,..m.ni mah. Johnston ot Wasco, Josenhl or p "'- Multnomah, Kelly of Linn. Koykendall write wnat they see, It is a large truth, of Lane, Looney of Marlon, Marstera or applicable to all of ua. lwuKtai. mavi lauinor oi wis unit i i t, , - - u..-u . Multnomah. Morrow (Dem.V of Morrow. V ' - ,mui. Mulkey of Polk, Porter of Clackamas, nd because they mean so much to the Proebstel of tTmatllla, SUiwer -of face, young girls aapeolaily. should take Wheeler. Sweek UXm.) of Multnomah. heart. Wide aa is tho divergence Wehrung Dem.) of Washington. W'tl- P.''ween ?"n'v woman, aerene. fine, llamson of Crook, and Mr. President mougntrui, noiuing, ine rsepect or an (Senator Fulton ). "h?.J,n,w JiV'iTJS The only vote asa Inst tne t John D. Daly of Benton, and ev of the Republican members above ' . . . T i.i T 1 . . .-, Mulkey were and are now allied with f'ie,","eAves' . ?r - Srlil i1"?"?? the forces that r. curslnir Statement " wiucn pura, swii gifi sun pa oiacra No 1 irom wnicn sne cannot: some out witn . v honor. There la no position In which rv, ,, .h. ...j she may not make others feel her good- thlt X. VLTi L?fJ i " ai'd where, she nay not Stand tnat law the very same men voted to i. , . . i. . l ; . t. . i. - nmwM&lZ ?Z2!j.Vyti? tn her Principles she will be true to hr- v.RP UJ fn -a1, oonventlons for 20 self and a light to others. ?Tt?i-. r?0iveS ,n ,favoi: of ele,ctlon of Stevenson wrote of Robert Burns B,rrii f i i i Vu",r ,ol,-fl that he died well, "died of being Bob-hSP-iSSHi 15if'7!?tuTe" ."."i as 1(lnf, hle Burns,'' and so be did. and so do public-an legislature enacted a law 'for ""J u" "V" ine same rurtose. All thenA ur lir. .11 i. f.?1?.- "d vllatea at the first pppor- youth, because what we do or think. Vi. r' " lh". R.ePe embraced, the day by day while we are young, cry chance to get at the promised ana de- stallixoS Into character, it la imperative sired method through the medium of for the young woman, for every girl, statement No. Land now tha gentlemen to put herself In the way of becoming ...iv viuui i nuuui cnti rnnnii nv inair I what aha wauii iiita tn r,a r f m a n,im vacillation and false promises might as panlons one is thrown with are not the well try to remove. Mount Hood by the right kind, if a girl knows that they ijuiouiic iiira ot a gar a en note as to I help her to become wnat la poor, and try tO Wrest from the nannla rTi mvar I anrrilrl anil nnlnvslv tn life aha ahnnlil ana privilege they have, obtained. take herself "out of their company. It , (is far better to be aiona than to be Thev miv full m.nA r-tinnia aii t.. I with comDanlons who make one see only please thev will nniv ni V.. the silly or wicked things. fenlng th people's determination mora I There is an awe compelling force in' firmly and in driving more and more thA principle , of evolution, that law honest voters Into independent action which forces thraturea to become and into other nartv alliance. , ii what the environment, demands, or per- yuriy can expect a majority of the tieo- ,r . w . v-,"" ..v,., ..v. pel's votes while denying to the neol J Portunlt' to.wd pnes own surround- ?rSl,hihf.L'fhu uranted or The ptarmlg.n."''cbanglnr It. ce.t If Republican lflder annnt t.v. h I from earth color in the summer to snow hinlrhePy in the winter, is fulfilling the Letters From trie People Burns will soon boast nf on of the best equipped liounag mills In the coun try. ! . a a A mile of 'paving Is being laid end men some, asserts the Salem States- au. ' , A Falls City man. in thinning out a 3-year-old peach tree, took fronvlt 87 peaches. f a m Fine strings of trout are caeght around Falls City. One man caught 40 In a short time. I A Klamath Falls man, P. B. South worth, haa been given a patent for a mallbag catching device. Brownsville Is nowMhe objective point of more homeseekers than any other town of Its size In Oregon, assarts tha Times. ' Schiller B. Hermann,' ex-member of the Ororon learlslature and a son nf Blhfrer Hermann, Is now a tea drummer in H5iera uiqbiiii. br 'has a nns rouno- 0 acres near Med ford, has decided -to plant a row or chestnut trees aronna tne entire tract. 1 J- K. Rot who. ' orchard -or 40 "Between the creameries and tha con- denserB-ftow running In this nerk of the wood It Is a pretty hard matter to skirmish good. butter for. table use, says ' . v . . . m The' next eViterprls) that CoWalita wants ia a milk condensery andCor- vallls oeocle may -oommeaca work on such a project at any tlute, Baya the RemiDUcaa. Regsrdfeas of the fact that Cottage Grove Is a dry town, th bulldlag roe happily on, says Western Oregon. Five spienaia Drica oanaings now compieita, with . tare - ethers under construction and one o two copteroplated, since Cot tage Grove arst wBt drya The storks Of several Klamath' Falls saloons and liquor store were sold out at cost or lers. 'and Aome of the pu- chasera. says the Exf.rea-viaently In tend to remain wet dming the next two years, judging from tbe supplies of wet good a they have stored away la dark and cool cellara . . V a . Three Corrallls aargaooa worked arr- ral hours on a voung mail' whose leg had been badly fractured by tea fall of a bucking borae. In th bop of Bar ing him foot for use. Th main bone of th ankle wa rumored, and th end ot both bonos ef the leg Deer th aitXJe war sawed, away. Marten JDorothr, a fanner nar Mfl The New York Sun et Right. ,: The following iajter, which The Journal referred to IA last Saturday's Issue, recently appeared in the New York Sun: WtvrV Portland, Or., June 10, 190i.--To thS Editor of the Sun We read with, in terest' in the Portland Oregonlan an a-rtlclt copied: from the Sun oonoeming the late election here and the methods adopted for electing United States, sena tors. Tour remarks concerning Governor Chhrnberlaln ware on the whole fair and correct, and you might have rflso thoughtfully added that he has been tbe best governor Oregon has ' ever had. But you have done Oregon and Its people - a great wrong when you de scribed It Is a crank state and said: "Show the Or'ea-onlans anv new device or political method to nullify a bit of constitution or to aoprive themselves of a representative form of government ana iney win jump at it. Nothing could be further from the truth than this assertion. And if some of our eastern critics would inform themselves they would soon be con vinced that the Oregonlans were patri otic and ready to,, make any sacrifice to uphold tho iohor of a state we are all so justly proud of. The initiative and referendum were not adopted here through darkness or a desire for some thing new but as the surest and Quick est means to rid themselves of 4he po litical bosses that ran for so 16ng the affairs of this state. A few years ago when one of our senators, our two congressmen, and about 40 of the leading politicians were Indicted for land stealing and perjury we all out here felt humiliated and sad. The politics of Oregon was then In th hands, of the most corrupt and brasen ct of grafters that ever disgraced an American commonwealth. They thought themselves so strongly entrenched in power that they openly celled the peo ple and in the words of Boss Tweed asked them what they were going to do Rbout.it. - Qtilte a number of them bave since been enlightened on that subject and are now. doing their stunt in the United States prison and the only useful work some of them were; aver known to per form. ' 'Instead of 'being harshly criticised, Oregonlans. should be commended for placing; their patriotism above partisan ship and electing to the highest office within 4 their gift a capable, tried and honest Democrat, Instead of one of their own political creed who tney did not trust or-have any confidence in. Ta'heiCity of Portland has now a popu lation or BDOut zzs.uoo ana a uepubllcan majority of about 8.000. But a Demo crat,' Dr. Harty Lane, Is now serving his second term as mayor of this city. The people became disgusted with the administration of his predecessor, who permitted open gambling and all kinds of fraUiia and fakes to operate her. AfJ. "these worthies had Jo do was first iu1 ara via political dqhi, men tne town was tneirs. a Today the Ros City, for law and order and for honest administration of muniuiai anain, ,-wui cumpare very mvoraDiy witn any city in tnis country. Our leading paper here, the Oregonlan, ts still at Ita old tricks, trying to still further, demoralise the Republican party..'- It Is moving heaven and earth trying- to Induce the members-elect of th legislature to violate the promises ihejr mad and send to the United states enetS'Some money bag whom the peo ple ' -would overwhelmingly reject . It given an opportunity. . nut ns erforti are all in vain. The initiative and referendum are In Oregon to remain, though we never expect to see them indorsed, bv either Senator Piatt or Senator JDapew. -. ir,.- JOHN BOtTSON. IB tl I I aim hard and fast law of adaptability to surroundings, become, through long ages of experiment, a oharaetorlstlo trait. Tha little leaf butterfly, that we m true library In the exhibition of so exactly like a with ered leaf and stem that even when you r . .. . '.' I butterflies, wnicn when it lights on a vii inn iesung rioor or tne1' turbine t branch becomes shon of the nennrai Ritrin aVmnaav'a I ered leaf and at niont in o,ka,.A i au-.il . Know it- is there you can hardly be ; v.v..,UJ, .uu, me mrSSi UtJve your e 1(J i0n,y following the Steam turbine generator In the Vjprld. protective instinct which has been Four of these mammoth machines, ca- "earned by long ages of experiment, pabl 'of "producing 20,000 horse-power .The.law of the creatures Is, adapt your each. have been ordered, and two win selves, or die. The fittest only sur-' soon be put in service at Chicago by the vlve. What cannot adapt Itself per CJitcago Edison company, and two In Ishes. New York the New York Edison ' -v" 't '" ' " ' , company. The first of these giant But man, by reason of bis superior ! machines will be ready for installation' Intelligence, is. Immune from the law early this fall, and once It is aal nn in that holds th creatures. He alone of Chicago the.. Edison company's output I them all may make his aurrouudlngs will be increased by the work pf 28.000 serve him instead of becoming their horses, aUhpugh the entire floor space victim. We all of us make ourselves occupied by the turbo-generator is only out of the surroundings that we make 111 m uai o ifci. -. i aui uuiamves. vv v luiitit uunicivvB, The Curtis turbo-generator Is an elec- It has been freshly presented, if we trio generator mounted above a steam would but read aright. In the lives of turbine engine and direct-connected to nearly all the successful men of ti la the same shaft. tory, especially of American men. They To those not fnmllttir with awnrlnwr- have dug out their education for them- lng problems It Is difficult to compre- selves, built their own fortunes, con hend .what 20,000 electrical horse-power (;uered fate and ao mad their own really means. itr. history. in this giant- turbine one of the rotat- Lincoln, building up a strong physique blades I n nara outdoor work, reacting, study steam 1'ng. thinking, made his quiet, unevent- Ing disks, which ton, baa Just cl an ertilblUon of nubile spirit nun couia t followed by soma of his netgrtbors with are It .a " . - - M . . ..Mr. h , , n I , v ays the gl. CDQiocla that a boat fx t atrJUea cou! 1 rrJMte file heme on Ms farm arj stli! lea Mm wrnr land than be r.y reoJa, h placed a-e ef It oe e market and In a abort t!tri tx famllie will Uv mfcer bone bare vr iave4 beief. . V ' ThA Dt In History. HOfivearh' of Peter the Hermit, the preacher of th first crusade. l?a Peter th Great nf Russia da- clslreie-oefealed Charles XII of Sweden at esttle of PuJtowa. 1 1 f ! Flrflld. Oosa,, burned by th Brltl-h. ' . 1712 City et Washington selected aa Lh capital ot the I nlted Btats. 1I John D. Rockefeller born In Rlchford. N. T. Hal Hon. James rmnsmulr, lleuten- (Uat-gerrnor or Hrttlsh Columbia born. 1M Surrender of Port Hudson, a Cnnfeoera te fortress on th Mississippi ntar; 1IS7 The Ameer of Afghanistan, fol Inarlrg a rising against taxation, pro claimed teace, amoeety, and a remission of taxes, for two years. It J Lisbon celebrated the four hun dredth anniversary f the departure ef Vesee da Oimi to discover th sea rot to th Indtea. 107 Ma rer Vhmlts of Ban Francis co aenteeced t five years' lroprteOBmest for xtortlota, . . . 1 - a The Ta tf Hajrtrbond. w Fror -rb Brteton Transcript. Jerin J fay Jtammrnd, save hi flfet pVnToee ha br aof llahed la th pnT.iraca or Tart. tat a dust we kirk tip." remarked th v V.j ea, th : cne-iot wheel. " ' ' -: ' icarrlea the7 hlnrlea In hard outdoor work, reading. HKiiinsi w uitn rne exnanmno- steam I in w. ininaing. niaae nis quiet, t strikes, imparting its energy to the ful youth a preparation for the burdens shaft, is 12 feet R inches in diameter land responsibilities that his- later life and runs 750r revolutions per minutn. ( demanded. Many a lawyer, minister. If It ran elonir thA e-rnnnd nt thin rata teacher, has used tha freedom from it would go 5.66 miles lh a minute, or distraction that a country life F'ih Its nearly a.iou mnes a oay ana would run iew aavaniages gave ror earnest, from New York to San Francisco In 9H thoughtful study; for preparation for hours. This and the other four wheels hard duties In later life. wnicn conwtuiite the moving part of th turbine, together with the shaft anrl th rotating fields of the generator, weigh some 180,060 pounds, and yet so freely are they, oarrteav upon a cushion of oil mat tnis enormou weight can be re voivea oy one ringer. Even at theVerx low rate of IS pound of eeeam ver hour par kilowatt thl unit would require 182,000 pounds of water evaporatea into, steam eaen hour to supply It when running: at Its rated capacity, -rne flays supply would mak a a i.i root ciiDe or nil a pond ix5 feet to a denth of B feet, and at th usual rate of 11.60 per thousand cubic ieet wouia -cost over nee.OO per day As 75- pounds of condensing Water In necessary to .'condense one nnund nf steam It would 'require' 4.202 cublo fee per miBire, or.as .mucn water as. would flow naturally over a weir or dam in a sneet a root tnick and fee wide, Supposing one pound 6f coat to evap orate and auner heat JU nnnnAai nt aai., IV would take 620.000 pounds, or 20 tons of coal per day to make the steam to run tWs turbine. This would make a pyramid iu reet square on the base and 22 H feet In height, ani would take a train oi iu su-ton cars ror Ita trans portation. It's cost delivered would be, for the ordinary case, somewhere around If all applied to lighting, the 14.000 kilowatts, or 10.000 horse-power, which this unit will generate would maintain about 260.000 H-candlepower tncandea- cent' lamps wnicn, lr hung In a straight Una, would supply ample Illumination to $00 miles of hallways 10 feet wide; or would aupnly 11,000 arc lamps, whlcrf.'Jf spaced 160 feet apart, would illuminate uu miles or ordinary streets. Using the output of this, unit for fan-motor service, 180,000 of ffiese little machines couia d aept going. a:ne energy de livered at the terminals of the genera- jor uuring a way s run at Tin load would b sufficient to melt a own of copper 21 feet in diameter at the ha anlnn ieet nign orap miles or copper rod on .inch In dlaSieter. It Will take only, two men to operate idib wormeri i maeriine a n.A ail i, . fuxlllartes -nu InUdiag the boiler-room 3 1 U 1 1 c grw i tSvlMchell's 1 ,!a . i' I T " iiiin.min ia ru-rier, ia isoiee vie president of th Chicago. Rock I salt and perfev te taste. Island a Pacific railroad la !. and 1 thh-ketilng of water and l-presldent of the yte tm April, 1104. 1 cooking li'mlnute, Ren Benjamin L.VIMchell's nirthdar "Ben.1amln 'aUi-Fon. Wlnchell n,..i. ucua ui anw- Mwa-.m. ininnu rRuroaq syn tem since April, 104, Was horn In Palmyra. Mo.. July . 1S58. Ha recei.. his education a the ward - ma kik schools of til afative town and began ins vi-.r ( fauroau -man in Julv, 1874. when he obtained employment In th Burlington eallway shops at Hsnnl bal. Mo. Two year later he was trans ferred ' to ths auditor a office if the same railroad, and In th follovlttg year was made chief clerk In th iarai freight office of. th Atchlnon a Ne-brarska- rallroait. ata A ta-tiaon Kan Three yea pi later he became aaaletant general pafssenger agent of theKarva City. Fort Scott- St Memphis railroad at Kansas City, and In lake general pasaerger sgenr.or th Union Pacific, icnver at irui railroad, with quarters at Denver. head He was rnad thlrl The creatures, are made by their en vironment, but man makes his environ ment and so makes himself. It is as true of the girl who works for her living as it is of any of the men whose achlavements have mad history. She can make her career, mod ify her surroundings, build her own en vironment. True, it may be hard: It may mean the jlbea of those who like to ridicule anything that thev cannot understand; it may mean effort and concentration, to read or study or tm- ?rove, when everything about her calls er to easy pleasures and trifling waste of precious leisure. But It can be done. Correspondence schools, night classes at business college or In the granimnr school grades, the classes of the Y. W. C. A. and the public libraries all offer opportunities fotr advancement to the girl who works, and advancement means better wages, better standing-, easier hours and ao more opportunities for improviment WtJ ilk glib V of the onoortunltlea that America, the land of freedom, of- Jotnlng In I he Search. From tha Torka . 'capital. If th demorrat ran find no other taaue they, might aH ettao'loft to th ract inet a ptetare er Tart taken when he wa I years old ahowe that be had embroidery on hta pant. There la something about that whlrn tha claln. common people wlil not like. , Coe3 oca tlon, , t There are Indli-atloe tbat'ene-Awna. tlon win he Irtroduced la th rmitmi school ef Berlin In the leareet rlasee Sid. tip t tb ro)it w-heoa re rHs be- n in lit lutr-twe,aNia eWnrieattr science, . , . - ... , fera to men. They are not less operv to women, and therein lies one great rea son for our pride In thorn. H K K The Table for Ironing. THE most convenient thing I have In mv kitchen is my kitchen table ironlngboard, says a contributor to the Chicago Tribune. I have the kitchen table padded, with the ironing cover stretched over It and have tacked down the edges with brass headed tacks. It never Is In the way, and I always Iron much faster on It because I hava a longer and wider sweep than nn a regu lar ironlngboard. For pressing of any kind, especially table linens. I have found nothing better. When this tahle Iror.lnghoard Is not In use I keen It cov ered with oilcloth, which bangs down over the edge five -or alx inches so that It will not ailp out nf place. Thle oil cloth cover keene Trie Ironlne- surface clesrt and endures months of wear. This correspondent might have sdded hat it ia a great saving of labor to have a child's high rhalr or an office stool to sit in while Ironing on the table. t The Daily Mehn. ' " Raspberries With Shredilawt Wheat Codfish Balla. Baking Towder Biscuit. Coffee. ; : T LUNCHEON. . Salmon Loaf Salad of Chopped Beet, Stewed Cherries. Gingerbread. DINNER ' Corn Soup. . Cold Beef a la Mode. Creamed Parrot a iv., n. - t berry" Short Cake.' Black Coffee Corn aoaip-frees a can of cornA through fruit pre or ateve retnnv- ' lng allth meat from the grains of corn. Throw away the little hard Shells Put In a kettle wltfe k. of milk half water can , be need but ail aim ia uniFr, war iRoieeponn or butter. Make a th,n flour and sad. ItalMVa Tm a. t i r. mir wil ana aerve- Cortfj.fi belle R.-mof the skin and bone frraj aalt cod flak and rut Into small plefl enough to make one ami one- f curt h cup Cover elth holllnn water) let stand ea the bark of th Slov for two bout, then drain. vno. ehred and aa a eql tmaotlty of hot maehed potato. Jat- lw tablespoon of butter stir ta te . teaspoon of ,u"if,.".?4..n frtr np ef milk, stir tintU thick, tkn tela wlih the- fiah and po'ato and seaene with repper and sale rlour lb bands, facna Intn ame:i - i - aad fry. . - A mttorx trek "r1tie T erJU bert cake wren bot Irv a allk ikra. 1fed of a knife paaatng it tbreu T t'"'f erh end UshUy. It U aaud to rrvf any sofglne '