Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1908)
V 1 .'. mm I i ii i in PIP ff' - EDITQEIMj mGE OP TUB JOUKNAL THE JOURNAL - AN IXPKPgNPKHT ygWSPArKB. C. . JACKSOX. ..rabllatlM 1'ol.luhKl rnrF Th fateept auadsrl Inf. Flfis tJ VwMII atrrta. WHMM. w. InwailHhi rt.fuaga ths malls M a4-elm ' rgt.KPIH.KFSM.il.V TITS. HOMR. A AU sepal tines Is re-hr1 hr Ibe Borah r. fell thr aiwrator th .part merit Ton wasl. .'.t Sld off.es. .-. E . J rOBKION AUVKBTIBJNO RKPBf SKNTATIVE Treelanil SnJ"in1n Sporliil Aitwrtilnl AfB-T. Brnnawlr Hulli-lnf. MS Fifth "" ',w i Tsrk; J007-OB Kre nuuaint, i,ifii Ssbeeriptloa Terma bf mall or to say Jdrs IM VIUIM (UIM, l.nna ar . DAILY. OM mr. ...... .45.00 I On Booth....... JO BUNDAT. DM rr. ...i! BO IOw Booth I -S3 t , DAILY AND SUNDAY. On Mf BT.S0 I Om month.. ,....$ .SB Jtm Irftlt MSI JH"J smcmswo m taw. OMOOI JOUSUTAi ithrrthtl CtruStd OcuUtio Bit Book 3 ( ilM0rxScn'm'Mm TMm Paptr o prorrd by mmtifMlmn Oit the cmlatioa ncordi arm ktpt wnk rmrw mmd tat Tmlatjom hllrf Wit C I accruer fiat adrtrtam may ttly om any 1 .L..,m at mm mad$ or tat pmblmhm rnnthr the ajraenbip tsd ..maaaftrntaml B 1 1 mf ly: - To mike public , officers re-l ployment, ana a goo tnany of them sponsible directly to tbe mmioi of I are out yet. Bo the workingmen the people, and not to a clique ot have found, out that the party of corporation-serving . and people-1 prosperity la also the party of panic, plundering: political bosses. Under and that It either cannot or will not thin system It Ib the people, even If keep Its word to them. Besides, they by pluralities, that nominate; It Is I are constantly becoming, as a mass, they who confer favor and honor wiser and more lndepondont, and and legal emoluments; It Is they and they see that the election of one man not a fow selfish organizers and ma-1 Instead of another for president nlpulators who select and elevate ought not to and cannot of Itself and entrust with official duties cer- produce a prolonged panic or depres- taln men., and therefore It is thejslon; that In a country bo wonder people, tho uiasHcH, the ninny In-1 fully great, so marvelously resource stead of the fow, whom those offl-lful as this, labor, under any reason- clals are bound to serve, not only as able and Just laws, must ordinarily a duty but as a matter of solf-ln- find employment and have Its re- terest. The authority goes dlroct ward or such as the lawa allow, from the people to the officers; to For some of the lawa are made to the people directly the officers are enrich the rich and to burden the answerable. This Is the vital prln- poor, and the Republican party cn- eiple of the primary system, and It acted those laws and stands for them fs this tnat Offends the self-seeking 'my, una iihb prHisienuy reiusea "Kdlson's fame secure." say nn ex politicians, the bosses, tho boodlers to repeal or amend them In the in- change. Has anybody been trying to , ' . ' I ,, !,, n n a s.t steal or destroy it? ana grsiters, sua vuoir urguua hu imcni w ,auui nuu ui iud kvunuuu the way from New Haven to Port- people. Small Change ' :'y Oraduallr tha stsndpst aonators ars Demg movaa to ins roar. ,-. Senator Ankanr ean ret slon with out ins senatorial satary, , . : k ' Shouldn't the new society rich novels be deodorised, by the health officers? If knowledge Is power, it must be equally true that Ignorance Is weakness. Whv doesn't some nnrty declare for the guaranty of bank dopostta for every bodyT . A new comet has been discovered. ! Why doesn't Ilubson shout "War with Japan." The yarn market Is aald to be dull, but this does not apply to political or listi ng yarns. A scientist says death can come In 200 ways. But one way is plenty for each person. Count Leo Toll reformer, friend whose words ha dom and libertr. and nt vhnu lnrlu-lta he tolliwl earlv and late. Ha re ence the caar atantla In fear, waa 10 1 calves his aueata In a blc. eauar j-ooro yars old August (. almost devoid of furniture But his An International celebration of this I wife, the oountess, reieives the same vein was piannna by his friends snd I uata In a drawing-room furnished followers in Hussla, England and other I with refinement and liberality. She countriea. nut th r.it r ihii. nm .hr ku.i.ii.,11, rrf count this has been ubandoned. I She Is sweet woman, and no woman v. iiuiwHi lammmij proveu i ever nna a, more toyai or aevotea hub- liiv tiuBLUiTia in inn whv. it niMi nni I triieve mat ne snnuii oe nonoren sti this manner, and decries all his service his recent arru The REALM, FEMININE, The White HandVf Woman. BTTT GREEN, .the richest wo man In America, has spohen. To do her Justice. Mrs.. Green Is nearly ss saving with words asV with dollars and . seldom talks H not band.- Hhe doea as she likes. The count or spends, msrely for ths sake f doing fH MXV :,9.t"f?r" w,lh Ror"?""L'V!rtJ:.. Her latest utterance to be made K th ruef Russia sndj throughout Uted In ths village Of Taaanaya Poly M,u',a l ; . - - the world. Esneclully ho deslrea that ana. When his health 'permitted, the "American' women hv helped to his recent arrulvnment of the omar and I n ,u,,..i ui.n tnl ,.. .. 7. 4 tho Kusstan Bovernment should not be the hut. of tho '..ntVand s.k them " JT;' .nT " Slhl2.hM?a"JJ? ;!to.w,t'li..E,VA ?w. they worked, and was In the' habit rU?"' tinA . i s i v rv t iicj tt vi avu. aaitwa t is, si sis uauit i 4 ... , , . 7. - r&teullu recount me thel ek.i.iinD. inone-ioo Dartlrular how thav trmt what kindness of my friends, the Russian Th MnVlov7hlm they want or who pays for It. I)h. j am he said: "I gratefully people, In making this proposal, but I xin kw 111 k. hi. not saying mat American women are it must not bo said that .Tolstoy hakdBora -re never closed ailn.t the n?5 "oril, but i do lay th.t they do its. He is their father, friend, Miulrm iM h,i.h. ... T .1 ' i"n snt and adviser. They como to " 'I' n15..bJ0.th"g i'0' the. lus;. land, Oregon. That Vermont straw did not show So what Mr. Gompers 1b trying to fifVo.uafWerl th M'n "traW TIIE 8. P. AND FOURTH STREET. I . Find, your niche, and fill It. If U be ever bo little, If it la only to be. hewer of wood, or Drawer of water, do something In this great battle for God and troth. Spurgeon. - ATTACKS OX THE PRIMARY , ' SYSTEM. N ALL probability the mayor is correct when he telle the council that to get the S. P. off Fourth Btreet the old "permit" ordinance must be repealed, and then the cor poration must be regarded as having no right there at all, and treated ac cordingly. Thla, If the S. P. desired to retail, the use of the street, would result In litigation, that very likely would be taken to the supreme court of the United States. If such a suit Is necessary, unavoidable, then the sooner the move that will bring It on do Is neither purchase nor coercion. He points out certain facts, and cer tain results; he sizes up the sltua tlon and prospects, and says, that In his opinion tfce cause of labor will fall visitors. Mewnort doodio should eaten and ancnor mat comet. e Chicago has a14-atory school 1ul!d U 1 A V.. I. I ..,!.! I " ."W ue ucoi unicujuj uiBiii-u nunius- 0 tie used for Higher education. men vnt 1 n tr fnr Hrvfln Thpv nnn't I . . rr 1 . , . l ..fl.( .ill... v i. n i) ,1, idi . .'.II. J. It. ill L 111, L nave to. i nere ib no compulsion. Taft wm be elected. But wasn't he so There Is no threat. Simply lnfor- also nbout his brother, and Mr. Devlin? matlon and advice. Yet every pluto- preBdent Roosevelt told the Olvmoic cratic organ in tne country, from I victors tnat no never was an athlete. Ronlnn to PnrtlAnd Or U nltchlnir ,n,s I,or Bu 1,18 UBe OI l,,Bl ul " I SUCK. Into fiomnflrs. as if ho were a Diir-I ,i t-t i I A Pennsylvania woman threw acid in cuaser or a cumpuuer muur voiea. B p0u,rlan s fe, which he feIt mor Let labor vote as it pleases, Intel- than biting sarcasm and caustic criti llgently, conscientiously and, be- m- sides, unafrlad. The Plutocrats can't Larry Sullivan has been rrubstaked sooner me move mat win Dnng it on . . . . . . to go and hunt gold. It wlir do Larry Is made the better. Nothing is to be to ?n" to do some real honest labor foV , . . . , should try. At least labor can t be once if he does. " I ni.li If on runrac. ntf th.n It Vioc UJUui as, an; nui kv vs a iuau sv iiao been within the past year. I HE PRIMARY election In Wash . Ingf on Tuesday furnishes an opportunity for journalistic .champions of standpatlsm and ring-rule to attack- the primary nom lnatlon law, though, on examination their . criticisms and complaints are found to ba, mostly mere windy, vag rant railing, without any apparent conception of the real reasons and purposes behind the ' law. We are told that it "produces disorder" In the ranks rof the majority party, . that unfit men present themselves for office, whom the people nom inate by pluralities only, and that, in a word, it is a disorganizing and dis concerting sort bt system But we see .nothing yet In the re sult In the state, of Washington to discredit the law. The' undoubted choice of the majority of Republi cans, or at least a large plurality. has been nominated for senator, and Will without doubt be elected, near ly all nominees for the legislature being pledged to vote for the prl- mary election nominee. A Republi can convention might very likely have renominated Senator Ankeny, , for he has great means of bringing about such a result In a convention of politicians, hut the people, no doubt correctly, think that they will be better represented by a very dif ferent type of man. At least they prefer. Jones to Ankeny, and that Is an all-sufficient answer to all objec- ' ti'ons. riv. ;.. So in ,the. case of governor. There ! were three strong and several weak er contestants. In such a case vot- era must vote for both first and second choice, and if no one has 40 per cent of first-choice votes the . second-choice votes are also counted, and the nominee Is thus determined. It appears at present that Mr. Cos grore la clearly the choice under the i law. Nearly as large a percentage of Republicans voted for McBride, and also for Mead, as for Congrove, and other candidates were voted for, but more voters preferred Cosgrove - than either of the others, and so v be becomes, the nominee. No one, with three or. more candidates, could get or could expect a clear major ity of first-choice votes. A plural ity la sufficient, Is fair, and is a necessary test. Under the conven tion system men are frequently elect ed to Important offices by only a plurality of a party's votes,, by per haps 5 per cent of 55 per cent or 20 per cent, of the total vote polled ; and nobody complains about that. So to aay that Jones, qr Cosgrove, or any other' nominee, received only v t plurality. Is an objection without merit and Ib made merely to try to create an ill-founded prejudice against the primary system .Would there have been any better results If a lot of delegates had come together, and acting under the dic tation of few machine-running bosses had selected a ticket? As able men might have been named, kut they would hare been nominated with the understanding and on the condition that their first and chief duty in public office was not to the. people but to the party.' to the or ganisation, to the machine, to the bosses, men who were making a business of politics for what there was la It for them, the people's only part In the program being to vote the straight party ticket and pay the taxes. Oherwlse they were to bare nothing to aay; fa 'the-opinion of tht bosses, the people are not fit for self-government anyway. This brings . the subject up to the mala reason, the vital, basic rrlnclrle. tha chief parpoM, of the primary law, and this yoar machine errs a wl'l cfUy igaore. It will not em Bene, horlng that readers will But, as The Journal suggested re cently, It would be politic to extend the time for the removal of the rail road from Fourth street, Jn consid eration of what Mr. Harrlman prom ises 'to do in Oregon, providing he will fix some reasonable time for such removal aqd promise satisfac torily to get off within that time. Since Portland has been so patient PEOPLE WILL DECIDE FOR THEMSELVES. Mr. Hearst says there Is no Demo cratic party. He knows that there is an Indenendent nartv. for he made it and Is it hlmself.' T After Its recent experience, one would suppose that Autrusta. (la., and Rome other places down there would want to go dry and stay so. If you can find "or other sectirltiaa" on a bank bill, it Is one of the $4,000,- uuu in circulation under ine Alflrlrh. HE NEW YQRK WORLD, that has much against President Roosevelt, does not like Mr. Bryan to claim or intimate that Vreeiand-Morgan law. . i . , . . , I ha la PAnflAvoH'i 1Mrlol Vinli- n .1 A I ana lone-enaunnK in tain matter, ne v ..vc u.,, ouu i nnm . 1 ,v x , . . . , w ... . 14, mill inKiMim i rumwmi s aonation ought not to object to such a stip- tnt fae rather than Taft will carry to the Republican campaign fund is ulatlon 01t the president's policies. The '.oft0' He must have quite a big In any event Buch an ordinance! world goes on to criticise the pres- , ', and the consequent fight In . the ident severely on several counts, and A preacher says he is going to drive courts will probably be necessary, tben says: . ff- ncTa .fc&uSS lor 11 ib presumea mat in removingi "wrcicn miuwa, iuu, mc region n ne wants tor v ,-ii , I fAtnlfv nf nnv nttpmntq nn hlo nnl. I r w ... , . ,. , - I nciiy ureen says society women the S. P. will still Insist that it has 't'cal paternity. He knows that should not spend more money than continuing and perpetual f ran- when the psychological moment ar-&aL!:Z!l?kZ.y2PBOWB . .. . . . .. I !.. K-ti. .v. 1.1- in ivooiiizBu crea- cmae ior a ranroaa aiong rounn i '" "a uicmu nuuu wu wm si- iure sne is. . 1 . a . 1 1, , . 1 ' I fla InfUflniifaKlir wYili nt 4Via .In I I street. 11 tuis biiuii ub tuts case, I ""rij i wiui- Tf,0 c0,t,ia ,r. . the council and all city authorities ants is the anointed heir and which that the Gugenheims have taken an have hnt one course to Diirsue: thev the changeling." 2PH" " .the Post-Intelllgeneer for r --- - 1 iivv.vuii, anu says that at that nrlm It n.nnnltlnn i Vn nHancnilaiit vntcra nro nnl I 1 . 1 ...X.' .. . .. . . . price It ixiudl iiguk mm luuimiuu iu a iu-i - -1 . .. . .. . .. .. , , v. , v. n..i-1 wuuiu 11 v a very proiiuioie investment ish. They must act on the theory going to take Roosevelt's word for .... that as soon as a repealing ordinance it. but will judge for themselves, him drunk?'?"ayl matron TnTid has been passed the Southern Pa- Some of his policies and perform- in a novel of Chicago societv. Rnt!!!L cific has no right of way along ances his advocacy of a ship sub- etn "'Ld8et AnlletLlorder f2 T. 1L i 4 ..... UMv Ion. nnl o n Y.i ..!.. . ' "." " , uu ruuriu uijvci w iiairtci , iui an pui - 1 uuu ui laigo 01 ui j t uw vmj inaiijr tx mun wnen ne was drunk. pose, more than any other corpora- ref usal, to attack the mother of tion or individual. trusts, the tariff, his approval of There should be no objection un- the Aldrkh currency law in the in der all the circumstances .to extend- terest of Morgan and a few other Irrigation win double the value of lng the time reasonably, but when bankers, his solicitation of a cam- "' Iar'a n union county. me . r. moves irom rounn street pib" iuuu uum narnraau ana me The peniieton High School Monday it must move entirely; its pretended interests, and some other acts the had 12s pupils, nine more than on the rlirhr miiRt B-n with Its rails and Critical indpnendent voters do nnr on PenlnK day ast year. m t. rr-i i j 1 1 I . V. .. v. 1 1 . . . ui . I " ireigui tarn. lue uiu uruiuauce uiiuvo, uuu mc uittjuriiy 01 uib aciH must be repealed. contributed anything to his personal I pesnt inn hi lit 1 1 1 I) v inn arraignment or si :. t .t - - - m ..1 . vicious overV,ment I,t us tuke thi Y""u..1"" P. "UVJ"'.. ""'JV if ury and finerv thev demand. word tot the deed." - a,v'I"i ,' """?' ,! I "More men are driven to dishonesty f - . -- - j . ... . nv TnA hlt, hunil r , . ...l. wvr witn jewels, man Dy tneir own vi nurses, ricn rooa ana gay times." , -,7i ,- . t-t-.A ,,, I aires 11 lrveiy, vnq no waiitn kv t l.t ill lJ i2 ?hIr,orS.K "'"tt: through the streeU of the village, chll- Stttr'hl loving, word for them all. iov In a letter aomewhat later to ths-Paris bnor but ha love. !it of "ill the . In wh oh' ln P0,t falsehoods, there Matin, he ampliflea that saying and 5?,"2S.hi f , JJloUf- Is a grain of truth. adds that all this life is a dream and 'rlsndshlp of tht pheasant. Xo wy howtVer. that Amarloan wo- death the awakenlnr "Our earthly life rr.i, . v.. . , man do not oare what price their nearest Is one of the dreams of another and w,Hn!,.TolVr y . - h ffliiT09 !3 maU relative pays for their finery and more real life." he writes. "And that ? tJ?d.la He. hae a prolino pen and pleasure la too broad and unqualified a life is a dream of yet another Ufa. and .h,s 1wlln' f " demand all over the statement to pass unohallena;ed. so on, ad infinitum, even to tha last Ufa. world, being translated tnto all tongues. American women. That means, if Mrs. the life of Ood. Among his works may be mentioned Green would but consider, not only the "Even ln this present dream life, we the following: "War and Peace," a Inhabitants of the marble palaces of feci that which the new life will per- novel; "Anna Karenina," a novel; "Child- Newport and upper Manhattan, but some haps make real to us. The earthly form hood. Boyhood and Youth," an autobl- millions of women who toll for their In whlnh I hii 11 n-u 1i.nlnfr nf rtur linnwl. ftfffnnhv "Th C nmmn re m " 'tfiAvaStnnnl " own flflllv hrii an A vli.,. n.al ..n.1. edge of true life tlnds us, perhaps, is "The Invaders," "A Russian Proprle- ble," well-kopt clothes are paid for bv a limitation to the free development of tor," "Family Happiness," a romance; the sweat of their own pure brows; (t . our spirit. The true life begins when "A Prisoner ln the Caucasus," "The Inoludes also many millions of women that limitation is removed. I Death of Ivan Ilyltch, and Other Sto- wo with great care and diligence keep feel, I know with- certainty, that In ries" "A Long- Exile," "Stories for Chll- their homes neat, their husbands time I shall be happy; that 1 shall en- jren. "Walk In the Light." "Master and heartened, themselves and the children ter a world more real.'. Man." "The Kreutser Sonata." and se- wel1 dressed, on a mall salary. It niinl: "The nekahHata " "Mw Pnnfua. I means women doctors, teachers, ste in his slon." "My Religion." "The Gospel in "(JJT'aph?' ,'rme1rl' wives tradesmen s , Id dl- Brief," 'Khat is to Be Doner 'Xlfe." w. 5 ' Pr0'8"'0"! mens wives, factory Tr.lmtr.t, waa V, I r. 1 C O O mA Alltnhlnirrflnht h mavm "I wniilil viao my lire into rour penoas tn m-i'The Kingdom of God U Within You," IT.l. Ll . H"B' nvvv i k. jv i a ui, uuvviv ii u a viittu' i i nar in an r i-tpanrriirTinn na . hood up to 14; then those dreadful SO .Me., h. rnt. huv mum. letter, .n I wnen onesays American, women. It ..a.n , 1, A I.J .11 1.... I '.I . ' j i, a, mo uoiiuu ul Lum i3 u isvui u itj- i j Kcenan les. iitrsH ui service. 01 airiouion. ana .nil ahnvA All nt ..n.iimnnn.H . -. u ...... , i in. itrnnirY wnnn nv u n nrronir nnnn i . . . walt- I means a vast army. Somewhere ln the vanity. r xi.,i'v.. ion ,. , ...i,., procession, to be sure, are-the few no ; nest ,vln,f??lei2b who ead the lives of petted chll- d reau- H?8 "I61?? worJ1 .AlwfP-J ?"a.okcJ1?on dren or poodles. Who are fed on the 18 years durlnsr which I live lar. horieat famUy life yet a period all wur "";'' . .f'V.r choice food, given rich raiment, who lie egotistical family cares, to concern for 12"" "i i1I?.di Harff -ifS!1 ,0.ok.e'd. at, We iave hettr? somewhat iL i- nr ..i,v. v, .n.i.n..t the greatest of all dramatists. He de- of this class of wnnwn lntelv. rainr r; iiV'r.. ' 'V, L . I Clared with profound conviction that thlns-s. Thrtr frailties, their extrava- o f every kind of pleasure, and the fourth Shakespeare had hypnotised the read- gaiices and their quest for amusement period, in which I now live and hope to I ln public since Goethe, toward the have furnished a text for many a half- die, rrom whose stanapoint I see all tnelw"u cijiuccuui huij, yi v-1 vnru Ecrmuu. inn 10 ko inm n. ium significance of my past life." I nouneed htm the master poet. The I deeply, there are Mrs. Wharton's ' "Houso The Tolstoy family dates from 136S. count called upon ail thinking people of Mirth;" Mrs. Burnett's "Marriage of nn. nt ihoir inM.mri pnmA frnm r.r. I to reject "the trivial and Immoral I William Ashe;" Locke's "Where Lovo manv with 3.000 men. and became the works of Shakespears" as unworthy of Is" and plenty more, dealing with the founder of several noble Russian fam- serious study and reflection. He was follies of what we have been pleased Hies. When Peter I was on the throne, assailed from all quarters for his at- to call the upper classes. Peter Tolstoy occupied high positions tack on the Immortal bard. . , . In the military andj,dlplomatio services. in February, 1906, Tolstoy caused a Extravagance and Idleness ami folly He was made a coufl When Catherine great sensation br an open letter to the ?re nt "V an", means peculiar to Amer- stoy fell from power, and in 1729 died peror as "Dear Brother." The letter themselves In practically the same man- n exile. ine title or count was not WMa wrllten lu.t nrevlon. to the meet-I"" 1,1 " -"" """"". restorea to tne ramiiy untu i.ou, wnen , no- nt ih n.Mnnal ns.nmhlv It wn r""" " "," Oregon SiJelififfita MR. GOJMPERS AND MEN. B A Detroit fMlch.1 mun U in u-,, I lll ,1 J . - 1,1 ... , l. a" uuu ijuiiuica ufj. uu approve, ana ill tumm-v in tne interest happens that Mr. Bryarr stands con- nJlik'CdsMl nhSiant thei4? PUt ,n a AVORKlXfi-1 splcuously for these very policies Mr. Kooseveit may ten tne Deo- .. ." urany ran awav, " i rn nn I Tl IT ! Ilm.i i. .. . . , v 1 . . . . . i iuA m- , .1. .1 t ov,-ia, wiicpk ann pie iuai lan 18 ine man mey want around a few blocks and then slowed un 1 until liau, wneni(- ,w n,nnnii .nihiv It was received oy tne great-grana- a "personal appeal to ths csar, fulli.. rt Iha nraBOnl a. I1 1 1 Tl T . 1 . ' ..... Count Tolstoy s motner was tne on iiraln anywhere, urging r,ril(,tlcallv ECAUSE Mr. Gompers, presi- to continue the good work he has and wellt lnto a "very stable. dent of the American Federa- begun, but a great many of them, Irrigation Is essentially the most Im- Mon of Labor, after carefully considering that every trust and all portant feature to be deRired in th. in considering the whole situa- the predatory plutocrats are support- this tCetsavs the Courier."' tion, has declared in favor of Bryan lng -Taft, will not take the presl- s against all other candidates, some dent's word for this. He has begun A Harney county cougar (it is sun- . n H 1 l.na 1,111.... .. . , nf tho Aldrlch-rannf-n-UneUlw some verv excellent work, haa Rtart- m" , i'Pa.".a"' anl.nials- am"nf " . ...... .. . . . .. - I '.'111 X i tiicn i 1 1 1 1 1 1 .M 1 .J m nnD man organs are much perturbed, and are ed a great movement, but they know Sometimes he slinks up to the porches greatly offended with Mr. Gompers, that he has sometimes been mistaken cats and dogs T Win thereon. Ko dc-g artd Indulge In many campaign com- and sometimes mysteriously Incon- has yet been found brave enough ' or nlimnm. i tHn m n -i.i..in fslstpnt Th nfonlf will not ho iIIk. s eu8n w iWien tne beast uuivuvo v yj i anif, mu t uiai lug 1 x- a- v - I a Way . that they cannot be ruled by Mr. tated to, even by Koosevelt, but will Gompers' advice or" Influenced by do their own thinking. Mr. Bryan's declarations in behalf of With gold you can purch'aso ... HtlfTfurther "cs.".! In behalf"' o? 122";?"$ count loisioy s mumtr wh ine uhij th , n.ni.lari. 0 W, inula The ?r. . daughter of Prince Nleslay Sergevvlch fA-,B,2?' P nirsSnal and vefv bold 1 in bllc"', .an.d P"-, ml .w,,3. f',n9 Volkonskv Leo waa two years of age !fttHr was personal ana very doiii in and tii8Sipatlon8, and ennui, and head when , she died She was T cultured! lts, ,lanf "ae'. In concluding the count acn)!Bt aniJ heartaches, and clrrnosls can rweet and gentle. The fount's father ald: Jr1 me unwillingly I be had 8g well )n Vienna or Calcutta was a landowner, and was kind to his have offended you, or grieved you by or Valparaiso as in New Yorkr-or Port doDendents what I have Jupt written. Only the de- .ana. ' iwaau .v. J v .. . ...... O ' v' . v. ..v, 1 11 I HI1I. Uirrij, . , . . . i . . ' ' ' " - In Russian people has dictated this letter. 1 thtna-s. forireta. thoueh it is strnnge that familv the count in early manhood be- Have I reached tpe end that I have In she should, that the class she scores Is gan to' startle his friends bv his radical view? Only the future, that probably, not by any means in the majority. She, views His writings later got him into I shall not see, can -decide. I have done born f the people, should know that .eriniiM troubles with the officials of the what I consider my duty. Your brother, the mass of American women are the csar but he was. never punished. Con- who wishes you the true happiness." sane, practical, home-loving, wlse-spend- siderlng the violence of his utterances. Tolstoy has nothing but sneers for lng class. They are the wives of the the Kusslan' government has -dealt tho peace conference at The Hague on ordinary men, the mothers or the orm- l.nUntlv mlth htm H llRHlll tn Willi- T.... 11 1 Oll7 Ua. .ilil n on Ul.nil.iii. nn fV children. TIlCV lOSe their llVCS tU der every morning when he woke up "The Hague peace conference is onlv a gain thom in the lives of their hus- why he was not on the road to Siberia, disgusting manifestation of Christian Bands, who love them, and their sons, Alexander III declared that while Tol- hyprocrlsv " who arise and call them blessed, stoy lived he should never lose his lib- jn ft iet;er wrltten in the early part A"d1even,iheu8Pn1er!lit,,"irrMnl? erty. and the present ciar, It is believed, n. thta , Rfiha,ir th . ment Is not, thank God, all true. More has gtyen him the same assurance. thnr Tof.tov nredlcted the nossiblB re- met? are saved from destruction tnan Tolstov vears ago assumed the garb ih..'-.iI5 ET!V.cJ.fi1 ii?.f.Ti.-rf. nushed Into It. by the white hand of a of a peasant and toiled in the fields ' J; "'f vasae to the woman. More wives even though they many times going barefoot. Tall, elfl Sd other oriental peoples He y have been .the Pftted. doll-baby gaunt and shaggy though he be. his M'"?. " ol. -wou M sacrifice he r Idle pleas- t to them fairly. . ,.- . . ,. I Ll ail wuuau mill iiw n --- - - - His eyebrow, are bushy.rils appear- , ent t on? - -.- r.-r-- HOW Snail inejr Biup chiiub jmnnn uii- and a teacher. The keynote of his teach- e8S be KiVen corn? Suppose their lngs may be summed up ln the follow- husbands were capable of giving thern lng sentence, which he uttered not long something more than husks would not ago: the women be.' responsive? Truly I. "How can you and I sleep on mat- think so. tresses and feather beds when hard- And there Is another thing that Mrs. working men have not even straw? If Green overlooks, and that is that tho you were Christians you could not. people who spend money sometimes do what right have you to too much, when more good than those who hoard it. your brother has not even enough?" Even when spent extravagantly, somo or it rails into tne nanus m mo unnn v - Keep the Pot A-Bolllng. death if it were all shut up in iron By Wex Jones. confers. How mucn aw Mrs. ureen ao ance is rugged and uncouth, yet when he speaks you at once recognize the kindly, cultured gentleman. Piftv-two vears have passed since Tolstoy fought in the Crimean war as a voting otricer. Mere ne learneu ine hardship, and here it was that he de termined to devote his Ufa to the wel fare of the people. He practiced what he preached, and has since lived a life of toil and privation. He stripped his the rights and interests of labor. Such an organ of the plutocratic interests in this city insinuates ln this connection that it has been as sumed that workingmen's votes are largely purchasable, and It scorns the imputation that votes are ever purchased in a presidential election in this country. Of course the votes of real workingmen are unpurchas able, in the ordinary sense of that term; they cannot be bought at bo many dollars apiece; but if men who have to earn their living by working for others are threatened with loss of work and starvation for their fam ilies, If they vote one way, and' with steady employment at good wages If they vote the other way, this, if rot purchase, is intimidation, coercion, and the votes thus cast' are not free votes. They are the votes of the em- ployera and not of the employes. And that this means of coercion was suc cessfully resorted to ln 1896 and ln 1900 everybody knows, and that great numbers of workingmen voted for McKlnley on, this account alone. And we don't blame these men for so Toting, if as they evidently did, they believed their threatening employ ers. Tbey at least were not sore that what was promised or nredicted ould not come to pass. And a man with wife and children to feed and clothe is not going to let them suf fer for the sake of voting as he would really like to do. But this yar It Is a little differ ent. It seems the promise did not hold good permanently. Under Mc Klnley and Roofwrrlt there was con slderable of prosperity, a little for the worklngmao and a great deal for the trusts, and then, nnder the same party, the same laws, the' Mte poli cies, the same promises sod profes sions and pretensions, there fell a A SLIGHT CORRECTION. T The Journal Indorses this frnm thn Kugene Register: All Oregon should be Interested In the success of t tie Stat fair, attend, heln boost and nhnui tho visitors from the outside that we nm only have the products that make the O AN inquirer the Tacoma Trl- rltusai 8pdrVn8'eu?n- progressive bune furnishes the following gether at Halem once each year and Infn.moMnn ".,,.;,.!, cm ... Ullicr limi e live juiui a.iaaw-t'u. i in sucn A nron llnr 1 v Ann The north bank line Is a railroad I commonwealth. which has been under construction for . , , ... . Eugene Guard: Harrlman save the the last two ye.ars along the north hank Oregon Eastern will be built acrms tho of the Columbia river between a point mountains from Natron to Klamath pposlte Pasco In eastern Washington L' .af l",nw' 1 "ni i. and Vancouver in western Washington, lent to saying that Eugene will be made nt a cost or about 112.000 000 tolnt'v tne actual junction or two or the eront. built and for Joint use by the Northern rhL.'ihJ'vn" JC.1,-" St Wo1,n; that Jar the knockers of GuRene If Pacific and Great Northern Railway there are really any more of those fel rompanles as an extension of their main lows lelt here? lines through. Instead of over, the loftv Tk. .,, , . . , . There Is no question In the ordinary ( as'-ade range of mountains nt their AMorlan mind, says the Astorlan. tha't ha.ne and on a water level. Event of 'his rl,y and the Columbia river will get tne nrsi ran sno its traffic out of terrible pa ale. that Threw fim ('t'Mf -ir i'l forgK It nsme-J j.eas, 000 eorklsg people out of em- tremendous Import! Readers of the Tribune were en titled to a little farther information namely: That running on a water lpvcl route "through" instead of over the Cascade mountains, the north bank will become really the main line, hauling the bulk of the traffic; that It doesn't end at Van couver, or merely connect there with the Northern Pacific extending to Tacoma, but comes over and makes Its terminus ln Portland, where it Is preparing to handle an enormous traffic which Is already assured; and that there being now a certainty of an increasingly sufficient channel to the sea, Portland is thus made un questionably the leading and favorite seaport of the Pacific Northwest, and will draw a great volume of traffic from Tacoma and Seattle. With these slight corrections or additions, the Tribune's Information would be sufficiently correct and complete. But Tacoma will go right on growing nevertheless, all the same. It will enjoy a big volume of commerce, even after Portland's has doubled and trebled. ; the Tillamook rerlon: that the A,inrU Columbia IUver Railroad company, a Hill line and connection, will beat the Harrlman system and all its works, in the race down and to the coast of Til lamook. For, as 36 miles are to 70 miles, so Is the chance of the Astoria A 1 oiumDia Miver oeyona. ana Better than. tne L)-ui cnanoe, 10 git in there, and ners. Salem Btateaman: Among those who nave returned ine complimentary season tiuaeia issuea 10 mam or tn Oregon mate Hoard or Agriculture for the iair nexr wee are Mayor Harry Lena of Portland. Oswald West railroad com missioner, and A l. Crawford, attor ney general for the state. Each ex pressed himself aa dealrln tn na v way and signified that the fair would he visited because of it being a worthy Institution whlcn should be mnnnn by all public-spirited citizens. Ore GuaV's Birthday. "The Giants Wins." Bv James J. Montague. When work shuts up its dusty shop, and world-worn millionaires Trail ln behind their office boys on "L and Subway stairs, When brain-spent boss and nerve-spent clerk ana prawn-spent wuimiis- man , Fight greedily ln swarming trains to get what space thev can. Some urchin on a platform seat cries out ln screaming glee Behind 8 pftgf of tw-ooUiype.-TJtte Giants wins, b' Gee!" And furrowed scowls are smoothed tn smiles, and everything the day Has brought of trial, defeat and grief is cast, the while, away. "The Giants Wins:" That triumph makes our own defeats no less. It eases not the rugged road to what we call success. It neither lifts the load we bear, nor vanquishes a foe Of all the eager enemies along the way u-an And yet it wakes the same old thrill we use! to Know or oiq Before the red, warm blood of youth ran sluggishly snd cold. And through that throng of wan-faced tHiyg and lanea. raaea men. There runa a rumbling undertone: We've won! We've won agsinr Who says the world Is growing Old; that all men used to know Of simple, honest happiness has van- IrVia1 nnv irn? Who says that city graft and greed, and city craft and guile Have robbed all city human Kind of everything wortn wnner When men still feel a boy'a delight, and In a boy'a own way Cheer on the valiant victors ln the game thev used to play. ' No pessimism need appall; forgive them for their sine. But bet on them as long as they will - shout "The Giants Wins!" n.tilal,,, Unnt 1 MitA nlHrnnlltd helD the nCIDieSS WhO Were CUUKIlt wrecked the opera house here last night I in tne panicr during wnat was announqea aa a iJryan Ctexlflsnd was the rn-ineeit rellrlna rrtdeit. Itnf la Ms fifty-third year i? re:iri. par an Hang. But fce retired agaJa dgft years later. This Date la History. 170 Mirlborough victorious at bat tle of Malplaouet. . 1777 British defeated ths Americans at battle of Brandywlna. The anniversary of Perry's vic tory on Lake Brts celebrated by a great ball and parada at Newport, R. L lilt A Mealcan error, 1.100 strong. Invaded Teas. but soon retreated. 164 General Sherman ordered all civilians to lears Atlanta and offered them transnontatton, 1 14 Floods on ths Chlrrwa sad trtb ntary rivers la Wisconsin destroyed,, many Uvea an1 much properly. Ill, T, I . . MM. hlirVl'.aa.fa Ifl f tl A Ore Oude. who last December wis I VCe.l Indies. I ejected to eucci the late Christian I le7 Riotous demonstrations aglnet i' " niiei Mint en I Jj-nee took place la Vancouver. u. aa.-". - - .. ,i, UUHMIQlin, Germany. p.pt ember 11, 1H. f j. the on of Hns Frder1ck Oude, a famous landscar-e rainier. After completing ai I - r i la . i la w .'--, Ill, dTpiOmStlC Ca- reer In as m rnrn. n te iteration ef NorwT and garden at Parts Later he was attai-hM ti the ministry ef for eign BfT1ra. ard was also attached ta the less tlon at Berlin, to which rlace h waa srpised In ,M4 T-ater he was transferred lo as attache of the gallon In No"riter, 17. Mr Oude was SPT-nlrtted ntaistr ta-t XimArAA .-a later trafend Xm ( nrattrn Thoor rwasg la rears as wntoiM with i T average tm nt aew la th d F ,ft-ma serr-e. V t 01 h earned an mrl,. Me rt nt1i 1r Us lmelMir of tn- i iernaiMa,a4 taw mtK m finsarr I speech evenina. When the people discovered that the speeches were canned," and that the eggs they had brought with them would not affect a phonograph, they demanded their money back. The manager deolared that as a con sistent Bryan man be couldn't establish any such precedent "Mre'darnawtff Tfie 'Wera Bdosc wmeh was totally demolished, is estimated at 111.70. Mozambique. Sect. 1. Jujube, the fa mous trick elephant, is being marched up country to the hunting grounds. Ju jube will fall down at the sound of a snot ana play dead long enough for even an amateur photographer to get a good picture oi ine hunter and nis quarry. Jujube has made more, big game repu tations than any ottier animal ln Africa, and It is rumored that the gtant tusker will be employed on a task of interna tional importance in tne near future. Outside End Bnss, Sept. 1. Big Bill Taft forgot all about politics today and went on a good, old-faahloned fishing trip, accompanied by a few close per sonal friends. Six launches accommodated the little party of newspaper men. press agents, photographers, moving picture men and phonograph men, who had been Invited to see. the candidate having some genu ine fun awav from the madding but unmaddenlng. to a candidate crowd. Big Bill fished for 10 minutes, with out much luck, when a private secretary hooked a huge bass to the candidate's line, and the monster was landed amid the clicking of cameras, whirr of ma chines and tapping of telegraph Instruments. Mr. Taft expressed himself as dellrht- ed with his day's outing, and -said that ha. thought th lriff alhrallld Via. t-a.'ianl eooner or later If not sooner, then, oi course, later. DARK hall which or initely lr Melbourne. Sent. 1. --The cltv eanlt. Vlatefl to the American fleet without the firing of a shot It is believed that the fleet will tow the Island home with It Women Oyster Gatherer. From Woman's L,tf. The work t oyster collecting and culture Is most ensultable for women, trot la Frsse, owing to Its tedious utare. it " wot srroal to men. Oftan tmm aa early hoar la tho tmomtng till let Into tho evening the women are standing VP to tho kneos to wator, with a iimrr ton beating dews mm thess. Tho reotut la that never a yar paasea wliheot onoie of then gr-rfng m1 and having ta oo barrfe-i away to I ha osvlaras. Tee work Is arU pa'. SS tni-r4 U oorht to K HI la tho eaoo of the few oh ran V--!a the rmfits tn Ur-e ant ow.all fertoeeo are aakklr iirHd. Zurcrant Sept 1. Tha new 7nnlln airship broke away from Its moorings "u7 ana cameo ine greater part Of Swltserland with It to the rreat dis comfort of many tourlsta Part at ih country wae left on top of Variico and ths remainder Waa dropped In tho Med iterranean, where tho mountain peaks form an archipelago. In view of tho accident ateno are H. mg luen to par airsnips rrom any coun try amaiier man nuasia. An Unselfish Hermit. TIs sometimes good to bo alone- DeP thinkers frequently affirm It To se-ek some a rot afar, unknown. And dwell there as a vory hermit For m. Tra not at all Inclined To frown en folks who go in hiding There to restore a tired mind. Or to eocapo a world too chiding. -Indeed I think that lowolinooa, instead of. aa aunt aay. distressing. Is eftes truly more or les A source of end.frt and a bloaalno. But I tn an aelflsh wight, and ao WH I n alnno I so freparo It, t have a hrow-n-ej-avl a 1 know Alirg wtti me ti ahare It Biakenry Gray la geptemtxr AInalet'a K K g. Nervous Women anu Drugs. EV: 8AMTEL M'COMB of the Em manuel church niovement ln Bos ton. In writing about his system In Harper's Bazar, says: "One of the saddest features of our time. Is - woman's growing reliance on those pretended redeemers from mis ery and despair alcohol, cocaine, mor phine veronal, sulphonal, and the llko. And vet It cannot be repeated often enough that in yielding' to such temp tations women are forging the chains of an Intolerable and degrading slavery and are making their last state Infi nitely worse than their first. "It cannot be denied that these drugs will lift the load of despair from the heart, will dissipate fear and worry will lead the mind out of the hell of Unrest into the heaven of peace, but it ia eniinilv true not only that these effects are merely temporary, but also that the demons which seem (to have been cxeroised by their agency will re turn reinforced a hundredfold. What ever, thererore. me nervous sunerer ay or may not ao, mere is one wmii- i si Inn he must at all costs resist and that la the temptation to rely on narcotic drugs. R tt K Daxk Room ln Apartments. ARK hall and rooms In apartments open on courts may be def- ely Improved by a Judicious se lection of wall paper and furnishings. An unattractive and gloomy looking room, formerly papered ln green or red paper, with oak or stained woodwork. may be transformed Into a thing of he.iutv nnd brlrhtness by having the woodwork painted white and papering the walla In a deep, soft yellow. With muslin curtains at the windows and -a light matting or filling covering tha floor, thla room would never bo recog nised aa the gloomy, red-walled place It once appeared to be. Long, dark halls in flato may also l)e much brightened by light paper. It it R The Dally Menu. BREAKFAST. Concord grapes. s Corned beef hash, poached eggs. Hot biscuits. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Baked beans. Boston hrown bread. Salmon aalad. Stewed pears with preserved ginger. ea. PINNER. O-onp MuHigstawnev. Breaded breast o lamb. Green -corn on coh. Stuffed baked totnatoea. Lettuce, J'rerirh dressing. Peach pudding Blaeult and choeoa. nisck coffee. , Peach Pudding. Ono cup flour, eno tablespoon of outtor. one teaspoon bok lng powder, little salt Ml x with tnlik. Raise as biscuit, drop In buttered plate tin preferred), oot in steamer and sloam IS minute, thea split Open, sproad w H h poachsa and 'cream. Cut the pear he op revet with sugar anal let lnm eland two or t hre hours ho fore usina. rutting on cream whoa serving , ... . y