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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1908)
EDITQK3AL BS.GE OP THE JOURNAL t THE JOURNAL i AN INDKrKSPK.NT C. B. JACK HON . IMMUer rvhIUhMl rterjr fretthir i-i---i-f H-hhIio Pfvr; nufi.lftr nnrntnt; at 11. JeiiMntl I'.ull'l lllf, Fifth llil mill, III .li,rli I",. i tlaii.l. lit Kate-rd al the rri.-. i I'iriUnI nr. rc.r tmntnttutvn tlirut;h ilip neilU .-..n.l 1 Pullrf irr.PI'IIHM S M.IIV TIT.". IH'MK. All d."prfmi'iita pm-tint In tl,.-o i.tiini"-r T'M the u.n.l..r 11,. -l.- -nrtnient r,,u nt. j Raul HI.!., of Or... II VHC lei'l W III Pill SKNTAT1 VI: Af- nr-T like Tiid, "in-i it I ei i .1 1 i.i n . .mhI . I -r f'-lMill ,is a I J . ' a ! in 1 I I !i In k . i- I'd is ih ii r i l.i.-sl I ii a l Ini ni ii !. i In' U in hi liii.i'i.ii . i i..iiii.'l inn hi In r I ii f. n il, ,M i. n I :i I ii' H In i lOllFION AI'VliniMM V reel mil Priijnliiln S-e.l llninatrlii llulMVir York; IcioTiis II. i . ,i ' A 3 v. '1 11 nt "j;. I Ifili .-.' nn lllll.lli3. I'l.lragn. Lincoln not i.'i.ii:! (if ii 1) v i I, ii i ( !i . .i nil I ;tl Inn (if Ml i . ,i I i haps '.rn i ( i ! in. Tiir peoph- I, ii Ii i i in ni t: at : .-'i ; ii i, , in ili-n I la I ( 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . i ' . ii' i hi ih'i ! ii hi . a ml i!ii ; n now, lOi a M. ;:' ii nl el: ii n Ii u I hi;1 fur a t : 1 1 . - 1 1 . n v- a la. 'IiiI.it tin S'lhcrlitt'l. Ttiiih l.r pull It lb I Ull.ll Kt.lt' ' . ii. .In . Mcil.o. P.WM . One . r J., 'ni dn.. iro.'.th I .'0 M'M'A V 0n rrr... fJ.Vi line rr'.mfh $ -'t V;i. AM' StM'AV line lnr, 17 :'i . in in, ulli. . ..$ 1 I i:i I mi i;m o; i i irn A Pur a rli (1 him n to lie fru gal in tit prove u n fa It !if ii I to his triiKt, while for the pour ninn to ho prodigal Is pre sumptuous, as sinning against prudence. M. Tupper. PERKINS AND TMK PKOI'I.K. t: HE ARG0NA1 T, discussing the California sonatorRhlp, Fays that It would like to see the Pacific states represented in the senate by men of the highest and broadest ability, men commanding the approval of the country by their talents, and In worthy ways domin ating legislation; and would es pecially like to see California rep resented by such a man. Hut. it says, there Is no such man to rake the place of Perkins. It mentions only three. Metcalf is an equally good man with Perkins, but no bet ter, and would be new and so less useful. Pardee Is "a weak crea ture with a feminine mind." (Pardee. It will be remembered, could not be- entirely "run" by the S. P. boss; BO lacks desired masculinity.) Ru . dolph Spreckles "is noted for his Ignorance and arrogance." (Ho bas Incurred the displeasure of the Argonaut and Its clientele by back ing the effort to rid Sau Francisco of official graft. This Is an un pardonable sin.) Perkins, the Argonaut says, Is not a great man, but he is "an ex cellent and highly respectable man, essentially a practical man." and should be kept In the senate. And he will be, of course, if the Cali fornia legislature should have a He-1 publican majority, for Doss Herri n would order It to re-elect Perkins, because he Is faithful to the South ern Pacific and all allied corpora tions, anil the "interests" generally. SUch a man suits the Argonaut, better than anyone except some man of greater ability wife would serve the same interests better. There Is a movement just now in many states to get rid of such senators though Perkins is not so conspicu ously misiepresentative of the peo ple as some of them- and to get !"i:V ninntl s ,'i'!ii a , -ilthv or I'M to- do and . In an a rt M I v.a . sni'H'W J i ; , T taNl'li (I Minn- man ir Ni u Ymk .Male sent not Ms wife i. i,, I ' i ;j n , , wild a .'Hid mutual iiiH.'i-rsianilini; lh.it tie com i a! inn sNi'.iM b.' perma nent, .-n Mat I... t'niild live with "afflr.ity." a younger anil as app .'i l iinr"? v . , t more adm iibic wom.ni. Tl-.n wife consented, with outward equanimity, on tin. theor that td.e loseil him no nun h that she pref( rn d liis happiness Jo In r own. F"icnl dev(doinients. how ever, irounn the suspicion that s'.ie may have been glad to be rid of him. For a few days ago be was arrested for letting his ai'finit, and while he v. as lodged n jail she 1. f his bed ami board and went lee. k to her mother, or elsewhere. So far the episode, or series" of episodes, have followed a natural and partially satisfactory course. The discarded wife, the Injured in norent. should, according to the laws that govern human nature in t;en eral, be comparatively happy ove: the way thi.irts have turnqd out. so far, and cm smile in ant icip.it ion of further trouble for the but recently soul-mated pair. The female affinity got a healing, which morally If not legally was coming to her, and which will go far, no doubt, to correct her Ideas of the conjugal relationship. Be sides, her heart Is probably frac tured to some little extent along with her shattered ideali; regarding soul-mating, which will also be a deserved and let it ne hoped a use ful discipline to her. The man, as usual, is punished least of all. nrej ..-Mt' cape what he deserves alorili; 1 lint line, yet he hay some trouble, which Is satisfactory as far as it gorfc. onlv there is not yet one-huii'lreuh part enough of It It Is nerlnlrilv it iun ..r..,.n Mr. !',,,! an artist and a man of "refine ment," as the matrimonial advertise ments say, to lie in jail two days, and-it seems his artistic and affinity seeking soul is dirt ress d because pli.te, swelled the diminished ireaii. freshened all vegetable and ven animal nature, and have done !"' Hi i In If any harm. September is ulniimt nt hand, and 'be fall inlll.s" lleuln In Stent em I... r Ii afllli jUMialh, though often thai month U "t- I"1' jmi'stlv warm and ,ry, and pretty ' t'l'in nominal jie atl, a summer month. And if It ' nave mil paid : -.'.mi I, I rain considerabl v in Scptem ".'ag.' to a presl her. there will be' prolonged periods r. liginie, leaning ! of clear, dry weather later, In Oeto It is not wis- to :. ,,r perhaps November" The 511111" 1: ma I..- a ery ; tensou of no two vrviru in intt ..m.. Inn all are alike in this, that dur ing Hie fall months there rir" weeks. 1 111 the aggregate, of weather vIMi j out rai'!, although need-il ruins have laiien. now incomparably more sat isfactory mid comfortable this Is ilian such n climate as that of pen.sut Ion to the railroads. The peo ple will willingly pay even higher rates if It ciiii be b how 11 that they are leasonable. Hut the railroads won't hl.ow them. So far fls can be ascer tained the raili o.uIh are making good profits, some of them very largo profits EMPEROR WILLIAMS TIRADE AGAINST THE SOCIALISTS A Sermon for ToJay 1 ami a ml Ii not c iithern California, where It does rain for eight or ten month?!, then a destructive downpour s. NO, the fall rains have not set in M'l ; or if they have there will be wc-ks upon weeks yet of fine clear v. either before Christmas. There will be ample time and onpnri unity for ail kinds of outdoor fall work j 1 bough even the light rains do not interfere tuiieh with that. The gen erailv biiunfifu1 harvest will be garnered and disposed of; building operations will go steadily on; if any have not had. and desire out-iiM-s, there is no hetttr lime In the ; ;ir t!:ii itn' fall: and so far as the v. iMi"i- is concerned everybody can be eonifertelile r.nd should be happy in i nod old ( iregon. In the Scptienber American M asm I no, fltls pialng about reason- ' 'm e .Mlrlicnu wrltrit an acruunt of linw 11 1 la m fcp lowiird Hnelnltntu (Kivmi in in,. HUthor iv 11 frlPiu; kiiii ibf cniiicnir well. I o ynu know the lari finint.iln whli'h HtiiiulH In tlio rieli lnn:plii t z ? It w.i lii inicii I lifd to tho cltv nr H.-rlln lo 11 vm rich Kcntloinnn. The iniivnr, 111 m-ciii .Uiiee with I ):e u.siml ccicnieiilal .ii."inni, en liod tlie emiKiror to tuk- iart i'ii tli dedication txci eln.n. Tlie .tn- ei'iei' witw nliftoltitii)... uulruKed. lie 1 ' u 1 1 1 liuiillv liellei- ' tlmt tln-.v would line 11. (ri'i'l lii Merlin 11 iniinuiiieiit WIl.l.AMKTTKS KV 151 M.DIN'C. BY Ii i: 1 1 TH MUTIOXS. her his tor and hep work. Willamette 1'iiiversiiy des.rvi'd a new biiilf'.tig. The r.'WH from Salem that 1 he ei 111 ! ract has been awarded for a splendid new struc turn on l';e u:u-rsity campus is glad tidings for thousands of old students, alumni and friends throughout the northwest. The service the ii:s;1t at Ion has rendered through On ; ears or more of exist ence has been incalculable. It is scarcely chance that Oregon has a citizenship so substantial, so sound in judgment and so Intelligent In its discrimination on public ques tions. The soil, the climate, the grandeur f the mountains, the beaut v of tho valleys and the splen dor of the rivers were doubtless con tributing causes to this result. In the midst of a nature so boun tiful, mellowing and educative in fluences for the citizen must have been an Inevitable product. Yet, looming large as factors in the re sult, have been the schools and col leges, and prominent among them has been Willamette 1'nivorsity. The ahle rates has become tiresome. '.'h;,t I:, meant all the time Is: "You people let us entirely alone, and have us to determine what are ren fotialil" rules Don't try to regulate us In the hast. The transportation b.i-s.'ness Is wholly our business, and ii'i'i" (it xiiiir oiisineas, and wo wilt 1, ot brook auv Interference whatever. II you don't h an us entirely alone v. e will do all we can to ruin you." This is the spirit behind Shouts' talk, and behind the talk of many of tie- railroad magnates The peo ple will have to surrender to this claim, this threat, and admit that tiny are powerless to regulate or bav anything to do with the trans portation business of the country, or they will have to prove by a de termined . and perhans prolonged battle that they Mr. Shouts has a torally wrong con cept ion of the .subject, that what he calls "our business" Is to whatever extent they choose to make it so the people's business. inn! Kvervl'ody Is a Hi-liillt nown iluy:' he Hlioiited. 'Hut lliry bad bol ter lake cure!' "linuulnu the miiinino of the rrowl wlw ami nf tho nfflclalu when, on tho May or the 11 11 v 1 1 1 1 1 k , lliey miw the emoror iippcm. Ill riice wim omber Mini tlin ii'. onliiK. ami bin iiunmttn'lum wr muro warlike Hum ever. lliirlliiK himself upon Ilie pint form, he lnterruptou tba H.iml man who hnppcneit t" lie cxpatla tliiK upon Hie virtue tit tho donor. An evil Hiilrlt l.s hovering over thla cltv.'' dir. I William. 'Hoclnlixm Id lift ing 111 Ii.imI 1 will not tole 1 a t n It I wIhIi e erj one In ktmw Hint 1 lme giv en nnl.TH for 1111 ImineeMe ImrriK kH to w lie .'xhaiiHlci ll the udnilnlHtra- '"' '"!"' r'.V1'.1 '". ""' 1"-",rt ",f ."',llM' llm and len,.l trlekn Hint l, ,.n MI rineu wuu niyinyiii 1 1 ...., 11,11, it f 1,, r..vUi, i. ..lmy fiilthful ciiniii'ii 1 lie lesae, ami, falling to urrt-Ht tho I injeei. Heal 11 curt refusal to nt- lnit ho Hew Into sileii'-e tipon me. " Tbl fountain erleil tn French. Into French when ai l. masters, that violent inn,'uiie. inn: aiaiK m ; lot ' tend the itedli at Ion Me fell that lids fnui'.laln wh 11 direct bliiw at bin authority . 11 lmo:-t, In. lei d cf li'M majeste. "1 saw a K'Hk) deal of him nt this lime, and tried to reason with him. I tiled to culm him. " My heaven, on are If the miclullMti hi r 1 wl not ieellite to mow illi'in down. Let them lock out: I will mow them down. 1 have liud eiioiiKh nf It!" "With thin he turned hln buck on the ,..-.. .1 r.,,.1 tool...! uenritf 111 I V nt ill foilO- rrlln" I tain. " 'As for this fountain, he mud, nd ili esslng the dlnnll iiieM on the pl.it fonn. with .1 shrug of his ehoiildei s. It Is Hlmplv ridiculous- nhHurd!' So iivlnir he went nn lie had come, like a drives me mad" he ! teuipeht. leaving Hie crowd ettipelli'd 1 lie Mlwayn drnpH "Strantte In f-aiy. the strtv or tills :it he wishes to owe! fair wan not I'lomll.v elii'iilnteit, evil t Is n Soeln I Ini I in ( formally. I sometimes think we huve words, a Socialist 1 11 natloiril tnoriVny which emiHir u to I, -nver with nui mnntle the 1 titlculous jilolngn of the emperor, ns Noiih's sons a socialist. ; covet ''d the nakedness of their father." rK0 aid Imposed O. H" I?. & X. KKCONSTKICTIOX. It. .1. .1. HIU, lms been of great benefit to rortland and the region eastward, not only directly, in building the north lank road, but indirectly, by spurring- Mr. Harrimun into action. Not only has Mr. II;irritnan promised to build a road through central Oregon and discovered at last the Nehaleni- means bluffer thing to you people than you now think possible. It mute IiIr cities out of Kansas City and (ini m tin and It will niako Portland easily Hie metropolis of the I'aciflc northwest. It will also make, rich and ,ini it.mis the whole stink rnlsinir ter'ritoiy tilli utary to Portland, for the reason that when a market la established here the stock ra Iscrs will raise 10 steers to where they raise one now." senators in their places who will make some changes, who will revise things somewhat and reform some things a little, who will really enact 'some of the Roosevelt-Bryan poli cieSj who In a word will represent all the people Instead of a few and they the combined rich; but to the told, hard, smooth, polished soul of the Argonaut like the surface of a miniature marble this is radi-, calism, demngoguery, and perhaps, romehow, femininity. What is needed in the senate, in the Argo naut's estimation. Is cool, calm, strong men who can complacently overlook the common herd, and with Icy dignity keep in touch with the few whose financial, social and j business merits are worthy of the consideration of a legislator In so high and proud a position. Such nis t-oiii-mate wnose mxiy tie beat j influences that have radinted- from has gone and Wt him desolate. So,hfro thc leadership that has been far, well; but all tin-, s (11iv a drop assumed by those who have gone in the bucket of scalding brine that0Mt fl-pnl' the institution, the loftv ought to be poured over him by r.ods j ideals in civic and moral lines dis- nini in.-11-01 luimi'ii. ine iaw pro- j s,.ni inaterl. have been a means of vides no adequate punishment for Upiirt for wb kh t here is no measure, him. though a public whipping would 1 Tho chief educational organ of the be desirable in such a case, and it K,.,.at Methodist Kpiscopal church, it Is not to be hoped. that he will suffer . i,as adhered closoU- to policies that mentally long or much. (make a community, a eommon- Perhape the only mora! worth men- j wealth or a nation great, and that fionlng to be drawn from this little :lrft a foremost factor in iirmvirlme- Tillaiiiook country, but h practically rebuilding the O. U. N from Portland up the Columbia, as far as I'ma' ilia -the point to which ll runs 1 loe ami parallel to the new road. It Is said that in this recon struction work alone he will spend some $20,000,000. The north bank road is said to be the best construct ed road in the country. Though in places it was very difficult to build, no expense was spared to make it the bet road possible. Trains can run over It. safelv at a high rate of speed. With such a road, as to spe?d, if not as to weight of load", hauled, the O. TL. & N., with its lighter rails and worn and somewhat neglected track, could not success fully compete. Hut Mr. Harriman. a .without this competition he might not have done for '.rears to come, will make his road along the Columbia equal to llill'sor as neat ly so as possible, so that trains can run twice as fast k&nd haul grealei loads. Thus t lumbia. for soni John R. McLean's CincInuutNm'ws .paper, the Enquirer, that use(r to pose as a Democratic paper but I.Jig is now j tlg0 went over to the plutocracy which McLean belongs, puis that Bryan will gain no votes anywhere in the west, is no stronger than formerly. This opinion in that quar ter was expected. A Hill railroad man who has been traveling through central Oregon and across the mountains says that central Oregon is big and resourceful enough for two railroads. It Is. cer tainly, and is likely to fret two about as soon as it gets one, "und then some." Sentence Sermons My Henry F. Cope. Hidden siiis kiow fastest. m Condemnation cures nothing. No man Is undone a.s lonff as he has a work to do. Yen cannot bless men until you be lieve in them. Revenue never Is no aweet as when foregone. The critical evo remains longest In Ignorance. Ho Is lost already to whom sacrlftre nppeai'H as folly. ! Spiritually Hie most helpless are those! who refuse, lo helr. Fellownhlp, (.renter CJood. J'v Henry ( 'op... !,-., i""e "'.l!.'K " 'tfedful, and Mary hall ',rVn hi!1 ,'"r I""-1 wl'l'l i uk x " "w"y f,um Hh'N you road that atory of ;hn t.ooj Master commending lbs "liter who deemed to HllKbt her abure In the household duties 'specially whet, yo ,t,0. ,, iiKUal Interpretation of tba Incident as MiowhiK that Martha was neKk.ctln her -ml whllo Mary was eH,ln for her, you cannot but wonder that the uppur- 11 iT. '..'" ,,no B"ouh he t.ralMe.l the nn.er.k,,'lJ1)' actl!ltylMor Hut llm Go.1,1 Teacher was not con l"nn,lng the hospitality of Alar "ha ' ho lillulity ,,f Mary. To hhn. as u, ... u iceLar "'t ,h sniuteiy' e ibnt is uif food anil ll saiU '"" f;"''l"iro-un,l luxurl. J Th...! op''" ,,,,u''1 of friendship 11 era iv greater refresbl.itf I,. , friendship of th i.o ,w(u Ml u't' Xt TJrn a" U' Umi "" " tabl.': j).. we n.it nil nee,; often to hear his Haiinir-- we win, i,,-.. ,.u..,-..i .... , . . Ii red n ,( ,,1Hny ,,, ,, , . ,- n, tubles. Hhi.ut clothes and houses. -hat we nr Iik-ly to miss that Koo,land mper I. ,l,. treasure of friends and l. man lellowslu,,-; And when wo would onteruiln our trlends rnlirl.t r,.,. ..' .it helore them than of tho rl, ,,. our own helves, we can t;tve The doors to heaven earth's lowliest places. are often- In Keep 'he heart healthy and happiness will take care of Itself. "Intelligent legislation, not sub sidies, is the great need "of our ocean currying trade," says James J. Hill. What he means by "intelligent legis lation" ij exactly what the country won't get .iron) any congress like the last one. Life barriers that resist crumble before f r! .n.lHhtp. all force Men are to be known by their alms rather than by their origftis. m 1 The weariest man la this world Is thg one who Is running from worlf. Pometlmes fleeinrr from the devil Is only a pretext for llc iiiK from duty. ma 1 1 1 y them '.' I no fc-reat need of .very life, that fo wh en otu- hearts are hungry. Is not food and drink. It Is not even books or thlnk "f. is not allver or jjold -It la just lelks, people, to know on ni.nth.r lead ..pen hearts, to taste the fruits of 1 1 lenasnlp. Tho one thing needful, that uriieii jjivea hai.plne.ss. peaeo and pros perity, Is just 11, M openness of heart this HiouKhtfultiess ofmhers that wlna nnil makes friends. Tho baspltnblo borne is the one where people have time tc know vou, where Hioro is uhvaj-M a placu by tho h.Mirth slde and an ear to listen, where tho love light glows from f ice to fuco. We noon forget what w-e have had or eaten In the homes wo have Malted; but we never lose what our friends have alven us of themsoi ves. The, house that iias the great treaaura may lie cm.) where there In no plato to be stoien but Ih i-h li.-.u-t .-..- riv, through habits of m,u1 jrtfi7nunlon. The weary man lift himself with renewed inor on he looks alnn- the road to the homo wher.. lovo waits, where eyes will look d.ep Ini.. Us, Hie woman knows not the toll and drudgery of the day'a work for uie thought of the fellowship v. 11 h t hOF-i she loves. . Many me makliiK MartTiK's mistake, missing the riches friendships In the machinery and lainivtratiniis of hospi tality; wa) are so anxious to entertain . . .. it.01 miii we moo mem away: we are so anxious lo feed them that we Marve their hearts pie w.mt this 111" and (list of all to llrtv' the Whatever elso peo winil most of all iusi to know people, tuat pen way itUo our real lives. The man who has Krlt In his makeup ill not throw It Iriilds nelglibor's face. The Pendleton Tribune says the farmers rule now just as much as irge of the Co- their grandfathers did. Maybe that '..'00 miles east-J is- so, but. the farmers are wiser and ward from Portland, will have two ! more progressive men than their tale of real life is that whim a girl takes up with an affinity who for sakes his wjfe for her, she is likely to get a good beating of the bodv ere long, besides heart-wringins. and no sympathy. If this detestable male creature were to be stripped, ducked In ditch-water, tarred and feathered, ridden on a rail and flung into a banible thicket, this incident would furnish another mora! that it would be pleasant to present. nfety and sanity for Christendom. TDK PKOPLK'S IUSIXKSS. of the very lies! roads in the United States competing side by side. This work will not only give employment for a good while to many ni"n, and put a great deal of money in circula tion hereabouts, but will be of much positive and permanent advantage to Portland and fh 1 upper country. Here we get an idea of the vast value of competition, of worthy riv alry, as against monopoly. As long as Mr. Harriman bad a monopoly of the business, be did net care very much how It was done or whether grandfathers were he so. or ought to Springfield, Illinois, Is learning its lesson, and will have to provide, means for paying tho mob piper. But the money Springfield will have to pay is not the worst of tho damage. W WHAT IS OM;. HEN ROTH Harriman Mill In real rivalrv have in vaied Central Oregon with ,"n'r-v that is. w X AN address delivered in Iowa j .Mr. Theodore P. Shouts, a rall jj toad president, said: "We still ' bae hop" that we are going to be b i alone and allowed to run our own business. Destroy that hope and we will have in this country an era of misery thai will send to eter- S tin! damnation those w ho are respon- i slblo for it." amj i How this Idea does persist, that! the transportation business of the Is wholly "our business." 1 the business of the railroad i throughout any large and import ant region is oppress: '. e. and It should be are! must be made unlaw ful In fat ; as w. ;i as In tesrus of statutes. J Wealth in Onions. From 1 1 10 Tech-n ic.-il World Magazine. I The onion farmer Is a comparatively j ii"w arrival upon tho scene of Industrial 1 artl vi r i.-s In Texas. He Is now one of his road was In first-class shape or j tt, Jarf;e eontiibutors to thc wealth of not. Trains might mope along at j the 'state. In a little more than r-ipht any old speed, and as long as the years the alue of the annual produc t rack would carry the sauntering ; lion of onions In Texas for the market trains it won hi do; but no sooner i has r. aebcl approximately J.'.lioo.oiio. t m 1 1 11 1 1 -1 1 1 " ncn t I does Mr. Hill build a new road j enoiiuou; alongside, than Mr. Harriman sees! tr.e necessity of builditpj um gOOd. Thus Will 111" people io niuiiei now iiiuen work a man may do he will do nothing worthy If he Is too busy to make friends. The value of our investment in the, world depends iaiK.-l.,- on the manner in which our own self Is drawn nut .net eniiehed through the touch of other lives. No man can be Ki'eat by himself nlone; all greatness la 11 Katherintf In to ourselves of- other Iu'Iuks. r Ho who chooses tn find friends haa .bat better purl. The snare o! our modern living Is that we if re so busy here mid there, doln many things, most (if lllt'lll IlI'lb.ll.M l...,,l ll,l.,., I,. ll I lie man wen is n.'iuiy ... a n i m t.eives mu oad when tin v sl?n, before nils." I.i never Is too busy for smajl , ih better find higher tilings, we are so mil ist lies. , lull of business lint wh miss li-fe's real 1 blo-sings. ' He who chooses friendship chooses at which lie can never lose. No man hi t.'iK,' rrom you Hie ineinory of vnyr 1 rienil,!,nne can roll you of the enrich ing of min i, the eniarpliiK of heart and s)'iiin.-.t!iv that eam.i us you lay with iilm ny the cnrtipt!.-o under tin- far off HtHis it Hal by the hc..ltlisi,lo til the Inline. Friends become inspe.i 1 .1 hie snul pn-.--ess.ons. tfo if - ou would .iluuv true hoMr.lt a I i t v ;.to..ai;v. let year Pf-.s: concern be that let In'Tiil is fed. ll,.i who comes 10 ni hmu wants mi mere than he wauls yifUi' brea.i and butl.i. ' our dainties and gllest ileliea- ies 'i .' .-t, in a I', i ll hiri".r t ri'm!s;!i i-i.tv flows, t1, ; . is emptiness and hi;.o,'er. no matter i.ny. a re cl-ised to one a n. e lu i . The en. my ? oon would lie on the run If taints were not so strong on the rest. The r.-lipion that comes from heaven will not fail to make all things heav- t it Roes. enly when v France Will lb) Honor lo (i'ambefta. A reporter of I.e Temps of Paris lalelv asked tho superintendent of the Pantheon, "Which are the tombs that visit-Ms at the I'..ntheon most freouent Iv ask to be shown?" and was told: 'That of Victor lfut;o and of Hauibetta; nothing Is easier Ihan to s-e the tonili of l.-tor Hugo but Hie remains of 1 ;a nili"t ta. arc not 1 e-i " It l.ie ind'-e.! appear r trance that the remains of the reat patriot, to whose memory all parties" render h"m nf, do not rest in the grand necropo lis Ol I1IS I'lMillll J. .ec.ll ' I J 11 (.1 leej account or -vi. Atene. wi.o wa.- one 01 his Intimate friends in the celebrated tribune when liamh.-tta died iiK '.tiier wlshed his son beried at Nice, where he lived. It was thla sentiment of inter nal piety against which it was not invi sible to tirocr-ed. 1 r father of Cam betta had lived in Paris, nothing would have prevented his nr opinion demanded, the mav a man would bemean himself If he Dtn,.r,n,i mni.ij0, 11,0 r 1 1 trunk and 1 1 m ti e h 1 1 ii os : the canaille. Isn't one millionaire I hf,,h !!iM an,i "''''iman haw J-i h h ,i,l hWi inanelers Mr. providing he does not attest to re-b""t ,,,'r""h "a'" rcuntry indu g.ng n a vain hope, form anrthing. as SpreekVs did--lto T'""""": whep both Harriman j ''" " and al- . , , . , I and other parties have rushed nil- low,'(1 to run our own business. It better than a hundred or a Niousand , 1 " "'lvt insimj raw ;...,. V ronda nvnr i c r',,. i).,.. ...... .i s nrt tfieir busness so much as It '""' - - . i . -i . I'd. , tlllU 1 J e 1 1 , . along wllh thee gn at agencies of : js ""' peei'l's bnsliu'ss. It Is not a development, several electric 1 ines ' ' " ! ' business, but a public busl have been built In the Willamette n'- A,ll ""til Mr. Shorts can get valley, connecting the larger towns j ,his Kiwar. . elemental, funde wlth smaller ones and Portland wit h j lr"'nt truth into his head, and act all- then the immigrants will come "Pn n' mav abandon all hope bv thousands where thev hm- enm,. I that ho will be 'let alone. There better served than they have been, rot only by the new Hill road but by the reconstructed old road as well. Railroad cornp- i i 'ion, to some ex tent, Is pn absolute necessity to the people's welfare; railroad monopoly cbnwbacons wtio are never safHed Perkins, says the Argonaut, is "a very practical man." No doubt of it. The Southern Pacific would never have sent him to the senate If he had not been a "practical nian." Mr. Harrima-n was once ap pealed to, not In vain, as a "prac tical" man, but afterwards he con cluded that the other man was not so "practical." from Mr. Harriman'S point of view, as be had represented; himself to be. j Senator Perkins is not one of the: front rank of misrepresentative sen- , ators. Hut it would be ridiculous fo suppose that he represents tho masses of the people of California. This, however, the Immaculately arls'ocrat h al Argonaut would by no j means hair him do Whatever else e do, let us have in radicalism.' no demagoguery . nothitia that would i not match with fr.ioi. l hard, cold,! pollnhed. little marble-like souls. Since seme discussion abntj? Mr. I ' Taft's religious b.,li-f. ,,. !a((i 0f ' bIIef. has arisen. he reiicinc; eon-i n"Ctlon of the president-, u. the ,a t Biay fe of interest .-..hi- Madlaon. Monroe. W. Ii Hair ii Tyler, Tailor, Pierce and Artrii re Epiacopallans. The two Ad- ' amaei re Coegregafionalintf .lark n. mra, roia, nacnanan, imcojn. t n-,,rh then pro- i are many kinds of people who only That Co'!;ii!.' sued and "Vir-i Koib I--.-- is i: tin iiuat i. hi a mother who pur ' ipped" a "Holv ii' s.-i ling of com- e;i applause. The ff male fanatic had prevailed on a 1 0-year-iih! girl to burn her best clothes and a wad h. so that she could become "sanctified," and the heretofore by hundreds: ' duetlon and business will increase want to be ' let alone." but the roun- Justly Indignant mother very reason by great strides, and then Oregon r.v nr! not afford to let them alone. ably concluded that the lusanity- w lll fairly enter upon be;- tn:" and Mr Shouts roupb-s th expres-! I'reeaiuw lanatic should pay for the destine,! ,.ar. r of d"vet0pmenf ; lon of his hope with a dire- threat. ! fting destroyed, nr. that being Im- And all this Is coin" tn hannen "' se'-s. in effect, what he nmans to . possible, should be sanctified" with IllSt as i V ,i and the I prices that ale ub be far I talned for the product. Onion growing nas (inne . anniiier noun in ueij' i e.as. It has been Hie (Jirect means of adding more than SL'.'ido.OOO tn Hi" Intrinsic value of her lands. Tjiasmucli as the groweis put a good ponlon of their an nual earnings from the Industry Into property Improvements In town fln-l country the lnoreO' of taxable wealth from ibis source has also teen con st 'ra Lile. The wonders which ivte wroupht by the manic touch of A l.'nld I ii'-- lamp wore tin gittiter than tie. t nms fermnt ion which onion growing has brought to certain portions nf Texas during the last few years. Hand which, from Hie time of tho early visit of the Spatdatds to the Klo Crandt border section, was thought to be almost worthless, and' at vp rv most only lit for gnat grazing, Is now brlnpiiiR in an annual net return of from $3110 to $5tn pjr 'rn from Hie onions which it product. Hefore the inauguration ef onion growing any of this land could have been purchased at prices rangintf froju $1 to j; per acre. It has now no established value for the ronenn that none of its owners are wlll- ine- to sell. They will not fix a value I upon tne lana A Poem or Xoday The Xow I'copliets. rty Ittchard Watson (iiMer. rRleiiard WatMin (iil.ler. oli'nr of Hie Cehtary. was born al Hnriloii'in n. -V. .1.. ptlng. as t'Hl'lli' an I cbruary S. 1Mb Al't.-r a brief n-restllig-plaee for j perlenee in the civil war and in mllmml tact is ' olisldercl that thla ll" re ill" ll son ill uie i iinio.-oii. ; service lie entol'etl on ins Jnumnlis; h. lth is ilerived from onlv I '.in 'i" laiini m .i.nniiei i n. mi .ice nun career, beginning with the Newark. X. about C.vfitt acres nf land, some biei ( "i ins mo an. .-.i . nun iiiuko uie. j. Adv. rtiser. Ho lias been prominent be P.. id of the abundance of t lie mm " 1 1 " m r ... is, ,,, ; m public nnivement.s in New Vnrk. Ilia .lie. niai in- '..,.,, ins n.-iow'.. s,., :i,,;n re collected in several volumes Shortbl rest in tho (.unity cemetery at. j o,-tlc selection given below is taken from Nice where he -could v sit. it. .NmIiI-j,, I)()l.m written and read bv Air. Glider ficulty now exists In the way of re- fnr yv..l,.i, v.i.ii.,'i ii,, , i movlns; Hie body to the Pantheon. It Is i nt Mlddletown, Conn . In June. 1003.) ! ' i vT' '"" "'V Prophets. Lord! Give with the family, shall think it U- ; faiTi- mate to renounce tho wishes of the er In deference to the wish nf the noo pie and tako the Initiative In removal to the Pantheon. No doubt this tribute will soon lie rendeied to the memory of that sreat man who directed with so much tenaclt" the riefense of rarls during the sieue and who strupKled in defatiKably against forces vastly supe rior to those of France. The Kditor Was Scared. The East Oregoninn tells this on R K. Kenneiy, editor of the Haker City Herald, who was at the time nf the oe cuirenee In a Pullman car berth: "As the nlffht wa warm, and In order to be as comfortable as possible, Mr. Kennedy left the curtain of his berth partly opened. Suddenly he was aroused from his fitful (dumber and to 111" strength to smite Shame to tho heart of luxury and sloth! Give (horn the yearning after fumble souls That burned In Wesley' breast! Throach them, great God, Teach poverty it may be rich In thee; Te.-ich t k lies the true wealth of thine own spltlt. To our loved lend. Celestial Purltyl Urlng back tho meaning of thfno an cient words - Not lost, but Boiled, and darkly dlses teemeil , The ever sacred names of husband, wife. And tho great name of Lovo wheraori Is built Tho temple of human happlneaa and hope! Baptize with holy wrath th7 prophets. Lord ! By them marge from us this corruption Il'Ul That seizes on our civic govemmenta. Crowns the corrupter In the itght of men, And makes him maker of lawi and lienor's source! and that wi'hln a vry few rears ' Only one thing will prevent It. and that is a combination between Har- riman and Hill to build no roads In (opposition or rlvalr'. to each other, I to acquire the electric lines, and to divide the f ritory and. building as little as possible, charge ali tho traffic will bear. Put wo think this will not happen. Hill is not n man who likes or is accustomed to do Ujings "In thru way. And then tims are changing; the people will hare more to sav. THK V.M.I. IUINS. H AVE the fall rain set In al ready ? " severs.! people have askrd Ja'ely If they are rwcoraers to Oregon thev resdMy be excused for klnir a question, but people who have lamj and Benjamin Harrison .rTt i-ved here a number of irars know FWDjnenaiis. Johnson, Gram, Hare and McKId'ot were Metho dlMi J"a Bnren. Jike Rr..evelt. bIoneH; to Ui Reforried Dutch starch, and Garfield lo the ihsrlples er CaiajbellHt' tfcarch. rili&ora. ' . i " v better, of course The light rains of the past few days a-e very wel- eeme, aod ha've done a poirr of Is a Rood,' They fcav dampened tbi divert 'intitna'e is. that unless they ar" "let . alone.'' to run "their own business" .ins as th.y please, obeying laws or not ris they eliOos. . the-- will bring .en Rtiothir panic that will ruin the peoplf who have the audacity and te merity to doniand tha' the railroads fo shaH tie r::n ;.s they plnagn, and In thtir Interest and service. Mr , Shouts thus throws down an ino!en' defiance to the p.ople; ou let ps J entirely alone, let us do exactly us we please, or we will bring devafa- ' tion and ruin upon vou When ra'l-. road presidents beg!n tn talk in that tone. If tnhoiivs Thi people ?o irp- , !i pare to fv.ow that thei are greater than a proup of these insolent, law defying railroad maenaes Tbe war !s Irevttfibl", ar.d the oonir 'he peop!" get on the ground and pre pare themsflves. the shorter and more successful I will be Mr. Shonts went on to ta'k shout the necessity of fair compensa tion and reasonable rates, which threadbare attempt to attention from the s'ripes. It Is doubtful If the lesson will be wo. tli much, but it was well in'ende.!. and perhaps a little switch ing of 'to g!r! would not be amiss These Hole Holler and other like sai.ct i f rs are a s rt of crazy peo- hat area-low.. r.vhortoo much rcee Immense astonishment saw a laelv Snme of them are free i crawling Into his berth. From a remark to sav that land which has such large 1 which she- made ho knew Immediately niodoVtne oualltles ought to be worth I that alio had made a mistake In thc riot lens than $1,000 per acre. Some of I number of the sleeping compartment. the union growers . s j . ney .,u,,, oi , ' rJ-. . . . ..c "i ' i Heln ns In me.ncrv or fh a.. be willlna to nceep.l less Tllail J.'.llllll n'sv. paper ninn nun mi HfBI mar lie; ., . , '" ........ per acre -for their lands. F.ven at that : could utter no words of welcome. Hut : 11 " h(lv,'n o frame a nobler price the annual net return will average a moment Inter wh'n a tender kiss was J , , nearly ?"i per cent rn the Investment. ; empl.inted upon Ills brow lie cmjld hol.I j ' n "''bier lives rededlcate to thee ii im ic'iin's no inng-r. ..,i,. jun nr inn huk. oroiner- " 'You act very strangely, my dear.' bond uttered Hie fair Isitnr. and jvhen she ; ' man and nsth.-.s. one In one are.it From the Harrisburg H'llb-tin. : caught sight of. Kennedy's face a mo-' love. Harrlsbi.rg has a fine flouring mill. ra'tit later, she ottered an 'oh' thnt was j Tree Im- of God. which Is the love of Its equipment Is said to be in good as I heartbreaking. lly Hie time the e.hnl man. that of any of the mill" anywhere with- of tho exclamation bad rtlel away Kfii-t In sacrifice and mutual service shown in miles and miles. Hut not a peg is I nerly was entirely alone. wondering i I ,yt kind I", before, i Heaven ly Ligh ' moved, a w heel turned. It stands there . whether he had bn dreaming or ha 1 i Now messengers or' righteousness on 1 a relic nf the pant. I'erhaps at ari.ois i aep's '1 v seen someone. i hie. for o :r day! So shall the The l!arrlil)urg Mill. times It mav again tie placed in com- ! "The woman bnrl made a mistake In And coi ml'slon bv those who have more confl- going to her berth, but soon found her. u dence in i's ear:;;iir i.ipselty than the hushind. who was In the adjoining i That rv J- al Out--,,, is. jf Here nn.l y. nic-n of travel, ex- present preprb o nreilction that - . . .i .oi e , . t ii,. Ob-ervafion, Can i fh. ti rnnrh it hss mtl its rl'nv" f'.en see Portland " advantages and Tho tru-t- of this assertion will be i,ifs o. f,,, I seen more cienriy jeir ur yar It might seem n little hard to Ii It Is a safe 1 betth. the grists wiM nc vfr 1 . S1, I r i - t j row s-' . f : r r tew intent. i-llnibs to thy (leslr-i al thy purpose and iport unities, and its future, more Kir Denzll Iblx tson's Hirthdaj-. Sir Henzil Ibbetsor. who has bee- This Date In nistory. Hi3 Charles VIII of France esme to th throne. rl,- V-o ,. , "... .. . . Ilsverh I f.1US inn, -., , P hi, din ll If" ' ' "or nun ipiiihp r"ll''s ,1" '' ' . "T 'J". I"" ,n"I iit j 1 it J.Vr' t rA w.. ... ntu-st menihers of th i uen r.ke rnis. out. to e r-r-er. went,. ' " e . . .... eo.'d l a mill w ithout wheat" The ' b,mR- ' reek Indians country In t-l il. lr.py 1 no longer' H ' Alexandria, in, cap-Hulitee! to a wheat-grow ing country. The acres j ,h r1-'1' . , , tbat userl to reH rich returps srebare-1 The Amph. trite a ahTp laJon It sffirlrr the farmer a flr Profit on i wl!" female convicts, oelng takn lo b' libor n1 Ms lnvittmen? I.tk. !1 ..r. That the pj-e.tt packing planti !i'. lding ere will j,,- of Immense ad rantage to Poniard and toall the t'l'iu'sry rotintri we ai know, in a " rt of din indifWr-r-t ay. but fm of r-?!i7" i as clparly ss .'me oii's-d.rs of the kind m"tl tinned dn h ri!-serTatton are P' o-npt ed by the rT; r ;ons of South Wal". test on Roulogne t his long bn Parils, and i lah5 1 S30 Pr In aeief t tbe dt . rified i f"or of chemistry In Harvard eo')ge ig It em tboneh m- I '"1;l'1 In Boston foa the murder ol nearly a!l on board j.er John White Webster, rn of foreafi and thei underbrush, atarted : main Iseue. Nobody objeefs to op the pasture, cleared tbe atmoa-jreaaonabla rate aod liberal com-. o'ti.r ecii'irrls hrf he.r the tr. eron the lend be ! -trrtned r.f its humue and 1 are romrelled 1 mo.i of t r m 1 - . . . - . i. - " ' 1 1 r UMirt I'm r k rn I. n i.-i.-- u'v I'n'i : . "'lira . imn u ! . -j 1 . i i4-. ,f. i . . . . . - ;1, i llf& Fearnia O i onnor learfr nt tK ''I Wort) vlior. pLnbIIed In r'"l''tnlnt There will he a lrrr i Ch"r,1"t- "led B"m July lv. K94 Tv Jnurral Fr!rl-T 11. A in lv roll fnr each li'nt and there 111 JY'l prfB n,u" of ""'J R"n fnd" jo.irnai rrin..r. He said U mm ffinr hom , ,b mu M.S. i1clrr'J,!r ,h: '""t"' part - - I l.i Turk defeat.l In a pernte 1 .rle, ,hv within fire re.e. ,hl.! TK- Vlll . fT-ll 't1'Yn' "V1""8: hr Rur- - siars. wen cmri iirv-a Ulfl 10 ui w i! d Mr ant away or From the Omaha Bee aovf tng r,n th Pacific crxiM aa a Prp- . The siest i fnr tho Cults Kf r ! ir'T,t rriTrt,- IP women tn herln t--k renter in f.t it . n k iv.. ,..i ' mnnr m-t w r! ..v m.,v- , ,. Vv.l "r.V' V.!1 "'n "TPlF them Jailre Jnhn I. Worthtngtein. Repuhli--en randMste f(-gjvemor of ArkaiiMa is attfmplng tba. state in a vlgorpu fashion. Indian civil mr - l.-e nn. who only reoentlv rs!gned th uouieuapi-itovern.ir mj, Cf the I'tinjah. was horn In Oa!-b-. rough. RngUn.1 August 30. IkIT He received his lo cation in schools in Australia and at St John s crti.ge. t'anibriiiire. In 1ST0 ho entered the Indian civil rvice tnl received Tflnld advae mnt He serve 1 almost entii-lv in tho Punjab ard ht.i fensiis revert sn.l iriiMtwr f ti... I'tin.tab have male h.s name famliiir It ell students of Indun affairs. In In!!.i ha was famous aa an auihorttv on agrl 'iilture and Irrigation Jle had charge for e.al jfun of the dtar ment of reverue arj rrl"u!K In the vlferrev council snd his ,. stroke which sent L-alpal Ral anl Hajlt ftih Into exile at the tine rf the Pur.lao dlsHirlisn. a year or two go. an4 widen t the belonlnB ef e state of unreet throughout the In dian empire that for aome lime has ued tha Brio Iclaia areat an-aaineaa.