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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1908)
4 EDITO mh PAGE OF TUB JOURNAL THE JOURNAL AN IIDirKMOINT HSWSFArSsV e. a. jacason. packing-house lndustry'and to a rich Nw Tork but f th whol country had the Tort Worth Star uh: "If Ghent $14.(00, or barely half It real vaWnd them, under either Bryan or hnaila I atVAlr am sm. It. a A I a a m. m. . . ... .,1 . .... I " """"uu' t r a i wiw a jo-mii ocannei and me Ati u now, according to tola estimate. I Tin. At tho cranSiUnd, In the lime- One allow doe sot make allantlo ocean between 1U spindle and I And the assessor fonnd so Increase I ' Hint, under the glamour of the spec- summer, though, ae the North Amer- the cotton field of Texas -oaa man- in the value of this block from 106 I But why ehould Cannon be da- A'S, ermon for Today The . Father Through the Family Br Henry T. Cope. jaii.ar.".-John. lv;, "II that hath seen me bath H th ace .i urru i r-Miaed. or. (- otnF l' It 'There, he matchea hie tow In place of Long. They ruled In aecon tr.u.iMU. urwk u vit -s- prise animal , agalnit ancther'a and the Dakota and to soma extent In ute tr ' ' . AmT 11 wIn ' 1m- He and hla com- Wisconsin and eorae other etatea. a 10.C rnifiifwu maim ma HOaia a-tsi. .,. - , .a . . . . " w,v taeular. that la the Place whore the lean points out. several illovi Lfuiun nnttnn tahrin wt nMfitlta lloT tnritiaiea . Ttia i. manttA.. I fasted and Bharmin ietad? They - B. I . - I . . " " - I - " W T . . ww a, f, W.., ' ' " . . w . .. MW.MVWW I - " . , - c.-. nwj nwq . , -, - iiorirain sees ut irni mat marina i nave arnvea. . in a raaaIa .n n at.. ii.t .ia. . v . i.a... i m.a-aiv a ... i. .v. . . i niri mi ani mmkh k,. vat. gaaear nirill , a, h, (nmi I a. a . , -ww- i - i vu mi uHt mAw vi tuf wumi iniiwiua utat ywr y v u. nn u4 jajaaiu auMu. rw.w uv uaMni aim 10 prvnuw wUa (t nominated una- wnat cou a tne factory and the field dit many eucn nalNvaluatlona oil - I tTir . ia I AV . . .aalAa. I . apa. a . . a h araV ' " ' aai H niBn criina. Bai V imnllih In Taraa with a lO-mln. Blmllar tract! tll hun mut. and I , "Ji new QOee UDCie JO V .k ... .k. to tranaportatlon eerrlce lnatead of that ouch of thla claaa of property I tWnk running by thla Ume.' I.OnO-tnila handlanT" A pa 1 mar. I La not Darin r aa rnnrh tavta nndar k .v -PV" . .V 7 ' cul aVM7 rnIe ,et ,B nr PPr1- cna alow, aa compared with Euro- ' nu aaaeeament law, or Ten a eaen otnere breed and metnoda. l hie darnm in Nm Trni. n. r.ii. I ..... .m.. .n I thra.rnnpfha - J I . ' MMaWU. V. Vll yVBUB LlOr Mill I " w . . w . wwvvwMtWM JfWt.V, M niuiDii lucaa on luoui. can rnraii p.nni.i... . A. tit... vrt. I lit nn.iii n w Tt. . i a... , , , ....taivTiTlTll ... . , . . I . " vau.iiHW r nni f ii- i i w u www v n uun 'v,u- .."IT wnTjronmenia. rrom morning ini. ; OP OhlaT And it hamuma . m,nm,ro.nn, I not know that mrh la tha r,u nnlv rwUMVNkMi (Will w"ii ii(n nlrhl ,11 ).. mnn, I .7 . . 1 rr , n. m iAiHMOl u uiwuvfl Ull.i; . . .7. . . - Br.MWirt buiirtiag. rja nr.. . raw ----- - onienowfc mat wnererer the people , , caua attention to uu inaunce. luor-oe Bur- chw-, and knota of theae etockmen and .re Winn in. .v.- ..1.;... - w .v. ., n ' .v.. I i - l a..-. - Va . . ... . I " ,-- w e uev vuo V yui" A Wl J lUu Vlbioal V4 ll VKUO Uia I m I au - a I anneHMV "TWent. ht? Mil tO DT tfllrDi I UTH VTUWUOU IUO 11 f WIW I In V.A T? till. 1 - a. ft Aa I fn . .1 - a 1. K vumhw x . i w ikiu utn.au inaunri ijul ui i nrn 1 1 hi: l i ii ar aa ii rn irinar hi inn i Alien muni ni ruimi iiiuinn ant aai 1 1 nam ma TCI KrifOMCA MAIN T1T1 flOMB, frll tb raiac tba (UpaiiaMl Tom waak ana, B a ta la . .: V..I .l . V VrT. . Z Beginning to rule they are put- i i Mn, br ite.nj.jar ftrmera haye crowded the llreatock tlag th RepubiiCan leadera out of A tTatua ..t-. c-d. at uKi poni n exactly thla atudy of each D0aP . Tb1. v. n! f h! A '.n1- . . other' plana and practlcea. Pictured 7 JtJL hM in Lw. ESiaT ' la the mind of each 1. a beautiful fn-'L..,", .... l Will Aldrlch and Cannon reilgn? If apt.. why nott Senteac Sermons ; i v Py Itanry f. Cop. nip cannot ii lv aave ta fraa- Oa fwr aUKDAT. Oaa yaar... t.M I Oaa Mtl I . OAILT AITO aUKDAT. On rr 4T.aeOm m I r " i are attracting admiring atten Hnn Koa 11 A .f Arlrm IhlftM Ittltn wr VA kt....... ..A V. J La Grande la taklnx a hlsh of coure: bnt IS. 000.000 naonia ir. L?11 V,B t10- ."- AA 1... .- V-- .,. . M.- ..A .VI. I 1- K . ... .V - - I a'W tvne. Stored In tha mnmnrr of arJi I !TT .w :u.r- ..u., -uu whhwum. - men. V-w.,fcZV--.T. -.i-i-fc iwr: D men to get control of It, It 1 tne great enterprise oemg cameo our judicial friend Judge George - It la batter ta be araclotia than te be graoariu. - V who will , enow ue Ut way to .J OodT The JitArt Jit humanity l ' nungry ror tne innniia nmw ' Therefor men flock te the err of etvsh nw oloe that proclaim, her Je truth, bare la the divine eecrai. Tat araln and enln we have to turn away aiaappolnUd. It wee not ft voice. It vaa but tha anha af unit outward oraed or aiipratltlon. ' Who wllf aha ni Oodf How can Another reveal truth to uaT Each man muat diaoovar hla own truth; It cannot D borrowad: It Mnnnt ha lmoarteu. Anothr'a hand may point out aom new (lory, iomt ahlnlng aplro of tha far-orf city of truth, but aauh for ouraalvoa wa muat maka our own way tharo. But what la tha way; how may on find thla oity whrln dwallath tli Circulation tftaanfet frnkCtrtiinthtt (ar tmbtiom of (Ja. omaoonr iTtnurAX 4 tT)ftmfitriM grtMlytU 1 daVrtwr'a CtrtiM CimMth Bhm Aaaa 1 "T.nA7.V.p.a. from the bottom. mblUon and opportun U to grow 'mt- aonth. " -I..""! "7 . " "7 . not tha ton. fmm tha m...a. , th. nd to amount to Bomeimng. munici- r.nMIn.n -Ti.i.... to b a brother, ciuo to tne rurcnermoat carta or ure-i. . -' ----- - " i.n i - - u..um.i..i.. .nn-v. mi ,. - ieaaern, la Toilette 1 the only eon-1 ... ........ .lo that they can chanre the conatl. I aVWill Tt Unl TT A 1 A trAA O 1UBBU I - I IS flpetlflA Wl tin All I M 1 It II II II II mF hot . miiaatAn. in nra.nn'a "Picuou Republican of national rep-1 " r ' " -. IT. " --V. I . T " " "m. I at. .k. v.. ia I- .hi. . I a water ana nowwr yeiopment. a new direction lor Ore-1 - " T I bond were Toted orer r , ..a tin Aa,, ,rt, wat .wiey can cm ... . . a " " .. ..V. " ' VkI I tutlon T Well, they are making an awF .a., . miAL . a . a I uun now. Aiuier now or later iney Tciopmom, a now airecuon tor ure- "V.7 , rvJ'nT.TZ. kT were Toted 0Tr TRr Urni mt' gon endeayor. a new Impetua for J"' -. Popl r begin- . . rocently been BOid ,B Cn, J will ucceed. Oreronthrtftt nmg w ruie; out we empnaticauy Tv......:ni..unM Toe ean set fine work only from fraa I Lord and Maker of ua all? Shall haarta. : , I climb up to the haavana, where our " lenuaian fancy painted a airantle neinf afakare of orltlclam never are eood I aeated on tha cloudat Bhall we rind th takare tharaof. . . . I Infinite by alttlna with th aeera In I oiner landa thoa who peer into lira No man ean long be a bigot who triaa atranra myaterleaT Alter ail, la not uoe nearer man we knowT .If wa ar hla children, mar w not find th Father through th fam ily? If wo have grown beyond th ne oaaalty of thinking- of that Inflnlt af- ioouoir-ft connned to a aennii oe - 7 a Pmptr Aa forml Ay mmtiftUim lAat tar circmlmuoa rararow ar Arpl witA i tun aW ta wAttra aaaW. wrti aaat pecmrtj (Aa( mitUMr mmy nif aa aa atawMrat eeeaw -a Ar tAwbAAar mmhr tt arwarAtp mm aaaaajeawat Mraacrwf p.a . 10. a . . CONTRAST THESE PICTURES. deny that they hare ruled much dur-l . ' . -a ...... tag. the past doten year. TheyL.; 17 fraM tb eitr. Cheerful alnnera may work laae barn than the eour aainta. 4 ..mm i A heatad anawer take th edae off your own araument. . . v m Wherever lor band tn Barrio the The attempt by cartoon to ahow hrt im ,B "hlP' ur. orjmu up aa a bianaara uu (3w ...T...A .V .. u . v v I at a point 11 muea iron wa cuj, " . - ' w" I He aounta for moat in trusted too much to jnen who be-l.a ,n Ka hT-miht in an immana. candidate may be amuinr: they are count himaaif last of ail naou lOBia, .ui ortn American t- . M.-arwnip and will ha anf.iinaeea bo to eome extent. M an In- - " ' any further, (we condense) : ' nt,,mt foP m.nr to come. Bar- dlcatlon of the deeperate attempt to SIYa oLT ii ia in people wne ar rtmnr. in i nlna flow will be used to operate) llu"1 vuuwu aunuuua tram me iaci ' Why cornea temptation, but ;, for man to moot : - And master, and make crouch ': ; beneath hi foot, And ao 1 be pedestaled In trt . amphf , ;-'y. ; . ' Browning.'' e SATUBDAT-KEEPTffa PEOPLE. I HE NEXT DAT after It suspend , ed, this notice appeared on the '. Ann. V. . . A V . . W that has failed alnce the law ia- !.8.dardA ?i' guaranteeing depoalt went Into ef-! .'v " VT" ."X, ' t " . 1 1 ner D wl9r enon-n tor xire- "ow' fwt t nvt.hnr... 'Thi. v la in fighting DurpoBe and Si so ror power I " o. wo aappoao, waj mnmneaa i ---w w a..Mv...... -. - ni uffaruinini ia noi aVxnrinfl a Ana. i . . " . ... - - inf ia. mi.ntin. T a.w...- 7J- for electric lignting. ana ior oom- M"vw"" atnnM. ti.... Tti r.4 - i i. 4.1 ... . . i merciai DurpoBea. bo v.vuva. A iv.av V.M feck JVU. I K - HViua a l.m vwn UOUWW CiWIUIlK. I ... . . . . I .....'.. a .. . - - la " ...it. . ......... money. Depositor will be paid in Th defeat of Jenkta. "Camion'. iu get revenue not omy irom water raiiacy. JJiuag proposed by - w-rww.- and flrur. how can w hop to better anow ii wan inroufn tnoae in waon affection ia beat ahown and toward whom It may be moat freely exeroleed? Throurh th aa-ea man have been eeak Inf after the Divine; they ar aa flow era that have through many at age a of development ever turned their face towarl th. ait n . W m whA fl.nnal haar rmctloal pity for men la th beat kind! to look at the aun with naked eye, may we not reaa iomt or ma gioriea in tne prayer who I i .. . . ... .... . . i - - i rrw .lAiiftii. if nrine me nana or tne state oanz commis- Motion of the oountry. Th Republican , , " .L .v ,V. ",T Please call and" get your party U doing ita own houa cleanlns. f""-' fnlL" At th end of the aeeond dar. morgu,- wa a eerrlo to th whol connmers. out iron pwwor wu.um. aur. enaa ia wiacy. , Any iaea all dnnoattflra whn mada thAlr an. I oountry. Tb eat of other veteran re-1 era. It will mn Its own HghUng or. benefit to the people Is a 4,fal- naaranrM fiad haian nald Within a w .w-i. w auuwo. van Thar who aocuaa o there often are only ezcualng tbetnaelvea. w. r . ! - No heart la more alck than th one that alwaye nuraea itaelf. e "Strength" may be th way that No nan ean live a whol life without aom aeoae of th life of ail men. . ' glowing hues of roae or daiar or poppy T So we, who are. aa It were, abadowa of th Infinite, must find that Infinite through one another. moo, may it not De mat aomenow tne great source of all life la expreaairra; It self In our living? Th child la th x preaaion of the father; th family of the narenta and Ita mamhara. Ia not humanllw. . . . . .11 I . ... ... a and particularly In 1U social realisa tion, in a expreaaion or the Diviner Theae aanlrationa. lonainrai Idaala. thaaa complex adjuatmenta of our manifold P HA. la m9mv4 I. .a. . MX ...a w . .... A .11 v.A ... A .V . I " -"""J " ". baa held as a reated right Cummlna monoy ucepi one larinor, woo wrote will be sent to talc Alllaon'a Dlaoe in wwt ne was too Dusy witn nis crop to the senate. Ankeny. Hansbrough, Kltt- come for his deposit I rldg and Iong have gon to oblivion. What a contrast with the anxiety, mphatlcally de th people rule in vti .MMf. Mf.v ti.w. Hma ta talk ta I llvina and thla arowlna' aenaa of a Ufa th man who leave hie work to llaten I that belongs to ua all and binds us all for them. togetner. may not all these be but th - mm. i mwvwuj ana eternal moving in US auu 7 He who thinks rwlc befor h apeak I Now, If we would com to know sy plant also. lacy." Any means by which' a .This Is the way to do things. Thus I change in the common people's In- a city grows, and becomes worthy terest can be effected Is a "fallacy." to grow so long as such enterprises I To a standpatter everything In are conducted on the square, are thought or, action except just what I lncreaaea th worth of his worda ie I truth, there la one safe and aur path free from graft, and partisan politics Is now. Is "fallacy." It Is an easy . .. I rr JITw-.?m vLKi0?. M .11 A . A M AV.. rYV I A A. AS. m . 'Mm mm a. I ' . I I . w ".V 7 Vw f . VA is onminaiea irom luviu. xuv ui i wuru 10 say. uib "iftnaCT. J Whin dinitr ! without founflaUon ini vprq. or &u wrnff, tne lnliniu noorc . a a. a. . a a I I . . . - - . I .mow I i .. Tn. A W a a A .11 can nencerortn ne neaitniui, ciean, i - . eowaotw, yoa may ixpooi a man w im . . . ".Tr In all wars progressive, . After a record of 40 years In now- 0Tr iL .... full iwilf'ef tlSthi'ehal-Si.1 Corvalllfl has done the same. If not I er. since 1860. can't the Rennhllcanl Borne men ar oreparlng for a proa- spring from heavenly eouroes in our EOPLE who keen the serenth day. Satnrday. for the Sabbath I fears and wnrrv that attanded tha Oregon that they hava ehoaen a Repub- havo a real grloTance against I uspenlon of certain banks In Port- "ffj le4',tre.to conduct their bom radical Sunday laws. ' True, land last year! No reassuring notice ?fr!.r.-r."7'1 " ? th. great majority of Chrlstlans o was posted on the door of either. De- nZ'TnT"' rT.,.., on u so enelve a na'r win! or crv nix'ZS lWVS Tift. 2E? ".wa . . . a.. ' c or n.av.n . r rn. r... n t . nina.i . w nr. . . a.aa, a. aiiv na . u lii a m mi in i . rwLu. in jouna tna r amer uirougn nil love for the children, and he Invited must rule. power, surely right water is not so avail able. But these and other Oregon il , 2 Zl f 1 . l l Positors were not bidden to come Main. Do not th people rule? gene and Medford are preparing to without howling calamity, disaster .iS u.. B.il..au1 uu tva.. .uajuiit, Uo get tneiT money. - wo yoice or All. of which shows that they are do to. though In their and ome and destruction in case of Its defeat? lie. im ionty nas pen assured them that they would Just beginning to rule, not that they other cases, the problem is greater Has it quit pointing with pride and .it lawn-auuuiu urn wuyj uu i na DBld In IUII." Or. even in Dart.lha.va htwn rullnr fn- tn. i hMiniiA a anrolv amnlfl Blinnlv of I now ran nn v v aw with alarm .'n emorcea.; uuu Kiutfsunuijf ux- tna money they had placed InBlde for 20 or 40 years. The peoplo are ln - Tolves obedience to a law whether .afe keeping. For days and weeks a deed waking up and taking a hand. uw .v, w . a.a, crowa or despairing aepositors nung uniy inns can goveroiaeii. d maia- aronnd the closed doors, stared at - talned among people- of many Tarto- tha Aarkened building and discussed - tlaa nt Anlnlnn An all auhlnrta. I . ' . . . .. - - - --- --- ----- i wnen, now ana wnere tney wouia, ir Bnt in this matter the law runs fet tnelr money Laborers, counter to honest, decent and devout -a ,t,im. w.. tB.P. religious opinion and conviction, and hopln ftgalnBt hop0 for E ntnn 0 YET AX EXPERIMENT. N' w Wl UfJtuiwu v gsuwjww, I whAn. hrv and whur thor would. If I mm T7!Wfl tttttq nA u-i ments have been published on several occasions recently to tfi. Affair fhn . Vi . M f .1 the state U supposed to keep cjr the savings that was their all, the pally-owned 8-cent-fare system of r. Zr..3 . Zk M,roduct perhaps of years of frugality Cleveland had proven a financial fail tate may move against a church or and Ml Th. Bcenea of those times ure, that great losses had been suf sect n il teacnes ana practices poijg- BOj eaHll, forgotten4 , teni ftiready and there Was no hope amy. for t.--9,i-Thtt, contrast between them and of Mayor JohnBon or anybody else ccuwmv jimu those of Oklahoma whereby the making a success of such a system uu iu b' """" "l"ou" - guarantee plan depositors got their In a large city. But all of thi 1b crlme. Soothe .authorities may, lmon(lT as they called for.lt, la as not conceded by him, and much of ana saouia, eupproBs i7 rtrlltJn.. ftJ the contrast between the It apparently Bprings from Inspired end such like fanatics-wno fllsturo perfect reBtfniness of peace and the sources that are constantly sending society and drive a great many weak- twful caBn of battie Xg tnere a ae. 0ut matter for publication opposed to minded people Insane. - posltor, high or low, lofty or humble, municipal ownership or strict official nw. n -noma tun wu w who would not desire that peace of regulation of public utilities neve mat eaturaay is me. wvineiy mInd wlw, respect to his deposit So far the Cleveland experiment appointed Sabbath, and ought so to manifested by the Oklahoma farmer has not proved an entire success, be observed, instead of Sunday. A wn0'didn't take time to go to town this much appears to be true. The large numper oi exceuens wuicns, i for hlB money, because he absolutely new company at once lost a large aside from Jews, conscientiously be- knew u wou j,e reajy whenever amount of revenue by reducing the neve tnat iney snouia aeep oainrany caUedi for Ha8 any meaUre, past fares. Some large business Inter- as a Sabbatb flay, ana so tney object 6r present, promised so much of ests did all they ojbuld to injure and to being prevented, from using Sun-jBajet and protection to the laborer, cripple the project. . And the man- day as an ordinary week day. Tnis, ue jm.- andjhose others, whose agement seems .to have been poor; they say, Inflict a real, material In-1 wajkB ln nfe are such that they have Johnson could not do everything Jury upon them. They become reaiino mean8 0f knowing which is, or himself. But a better showing Is martyrs, in a sense, to honest rellg- j wntCh iB not, a safe plate to deposit lately being made and a plan of re- lous convictions mat xrom a, civu m0neyT organisation under a holding corn- It la reported that men are being cities will succeed, will solve these I paid to go among workingmen and problems. La Grande Is setting" an I predict panic and disaster if Bryan example. Now watch It grow analshould .be elected. It Is not an ad- drosper. , :.; JmlraMerJob. '.point of view are, wholly nnobjefr ' tlonable. - . . But this Is one of the penalties of ; being ln a minority. If the Saturday ' people were In a majority would they ' not do Just what the Sunday people do? The law does not really mean to Infringe upon their religious lib erty; such Infringement Is Incidental pany, as an agent of -the city, is be- THE PEOPLE ARE BEGINNING In g discussed and will probably be TO RULE. I submitted to the people. It is by no means certain yet that R .BPLYING to Mr. Bryan's slogan, such a plan In a great city like Cleve- "Shall the People Rule?" See- land cannot be made to succeed, even retary Root said: though the experience for the first Thla Is a representative govern- months are so me wnat discouraging ment. It surely la not proposed to ao it is as yet ln an experimental etaee. ; Either the Saturday people must I aWay with representation and Have 85. thus be punished unjustly for con- j 000.000 of people make and execute their science sake, or else the great ma-1 laws directly, without tne intervention of legislative ana executive agents. Are not the laws being made and executed by the agents whom the people have se lected for that purpose? Has not every congressional district been represented ln eongresa by the man whom a ma jority of its voter selected? Is not Jorlty must abolish all Sunday laws. it Is a wrong without a practical remedy. Some people, happily, will not object to two Sunday in a week. ' A NOTABLE EXHIBIT. T dard HOW WILL WE GET IT? HE OREGONIAN wants "a gov ernment that is stcong enough to deal with 'vast combinations of capital, like those of Stan Oil, the steel trust and the WHEN WB KNOW OREGON. B' Well, yes, why should not Cortel- you also have to go? Or why was ECAUSB we are so familiar with he raised to eminence, after collect- them, we do not comprehend I ing a great boodle fund from the in- the good things of Oregon In terests? their fullness. Here is Ore gon fir. One of the finest rooms ln I Mr. Foraker thinks he has done all the state is permanently fitted no wrong. But if he has he thinks with furniture made of It. That j he know of a lot of eminent poll room is the parlor of the Portland j tlclans who are in the same boat commercial club. The furniture was made of Oregon fir by Oregon manu-1 There needs to. be a sane, reason- facturers. Oregon handiwork did able, courageous modification of the the BhaDlnK. Oregon hands put on Sunday laws, will tne next legisia the finish. Not anywhere in the wide ture attempt the Job? world Is there setting of furniture more dellsrhtful to the eye. So ele- Foraker had to quit Du Pont has rant la its finish, so charmlMt Its I been dropped. Who next? There's effect, that the sight of It Is desire I a long list from which to pick men for It The eye of one of the master that must "go." figures ln the railroad world fell on I it recently and furniture of the name I No doubt there are too many Sun- mold, from the same material and &7 laws. Perhaps they can only by the same workmen, Is to be the be gotten rid of .by trying to en- fitrnitiirn aottlnor ln on of the mar-1 lore mem. An Independent Editor. From the Huntington Herald. Quite a number of th oltlsens Of Huntington have asked u to Jump onto council ror tneir ac- ' aur ma tmiurtu. ana a inviiea men to know the Father throurh htm. elf, their brother. The more our lives ma out in love to otner uvea, tb more IU the mayor and tiona ln recard trouble. Now wa1 do not unhold marshal In his actions, neither do w I to the city marshal I ully and dearly ahall wa know th. m. vine. Christianity tells of a Ood who lovaa the I man, who seeks them, whe goes out we I amongat them, wlnnln them to tha unhold the mavor and 1 council in lg-1 higher, fairer wava. a man la a-niliv noiing this matter. . Wa did not; corner not ln th measure that he reaches tip her to undertake the task of making to the heavens, but ln the measure that Huntington a moral town. If. that had he, too, reaches out to men; he Is dl been our Intentions, we would have vine in th measure that he catches that sent for Carrie Nation to com and glorious spirit of self-glvlna-. He beat assist us. The citizens of Huntington believes ln God who most Relieves in elected the present mayor and council I men. before we came here," and If they have I Heaven is found In humble places anything thev wish published ln regard here: the divine is in tha faces of our to the manner In which they are ru-1 fellows, ln ways of lowly service and nlng the. city, we will gladly furnish suf ferlng. Not in th vaulted skies shall tne tieraia ror any aruoie i wi una tne iruin aoout tne infinite, space ln the ey may write, but w cannot see i out in u races or our fellows, ln walk- why we, a new comer In the city, ling the ways where men and women ahoulil talra tin thla flrht and roast the I WD. In leading little chlldran out a city administration, while the rest of I field of happy laughter. In doing for you stand back and yell, "sio -em xige, bji our xina wnat we believe the hi Aa far aa we are Dersonally concerned est would ao lor us all. it mages no uiiierenc to us wnat tney ao. Mgh- Land of Plenty. f From the lone Proclalmer. What a wonderful county Is Morrow! A Poem for Today Pretty soon we may be told that Standard Oil et al have been support ing and. coaching Bryan all these years. By Mrs. Helen Flake Jackson. . I Mrs. Helen Flake Jarkann alnra Where under Qod's blue canopy can you j known by her pen name, Helen Hunt find one county where Its settlers can Jackson, or simply "H. H.," was born ln suddIv their town and many other peo- Amherst, Mass., in 183.1. the daughter pies' wants as this one does? Here ln of Professor N. W. Flake. She married this Immediate neighborhood w have Major E. Ii. Hunt and spent the later th flneat wheat, honey, alfalfa, ' pears, years of her life at Colorado Springs.) peaches, apples, horses and cattle the . , world can show: over ln HeDDner be-1 a blind spinner ln the sun sides these things they have wool to J my daya; seep nearly th nation warm, wnne our ' -"" " ino, win run n.w an1 msliir Minnlr nt TrHarnn al. I Appointed Wave: ready ia sending out all classes , of Jow-.?a5h ,da7 wil1 bring its task. grapes, berries, melons and tree fruit And, being blind, no more Dy tne car. Ana-tne ceauty or au tnis 'is, there Is still room for many more here and all can be as prosperous aa those that ar now here. ask. Apples' From Hosier. Over 28,000 boxes of apples have been shipped from Mosler this year, and this means 86 carioaas or wasco county ap ples have found their way to the east, and eventually some of them will be eaten In London and other cities across the sea. , . nificent rooms of his $8,000,000 res idence In the distant and exacting east. Mr. Harriman, arbiter of mil lion's, and king ln a railroad king dom, was this man, and his enthus iasm for this furniture fashioned from Oregon fir Is unbounded. von t 8et BO "itea aoout pontics. TTioir aaarnh tha C-lohA tnr fanrv M tO IOrgei KOOQ fUaUS. WO Will woods out of which to fashion hand some furniture. They travel to the JliJSlJEl1- ?!!SL-"5!-r a?r 1 1 PROTECTXTON HAS BECOME PLUNDER fiiuuo, yajiuft iar.au w uu.. aui n auia-i terial to enter into the setting of stately homes. But, after it all, here Is Oregon fir, and we have 800 thou-l sand million feet of Oregon fir. I do not know the use or nam Of that I spin; I only know that some on came And laid within By Franklin Pierce THE INLAND EMPIRE HalRVEST. great railroad combines, the beef verw atata represented ln tb senate by I trnt tha an car tmst and vrv nthar Twjii livesioca snow is History, a senators chosen by its own legislature, trust that doe an Interstate and mo- milestone has been set in the .elected by th peopl of th state for n0poly business; a government not . , aeveiopmeni 01 wregon. a um perromanc ot mat vtry outri only that na power, but the transformaUon of developing With all. due respect to a very able wiingnA8s and disposition to do endeavor and a change ln Its dl- lawyer and statesman, this is a clear tnese and other Mk) things." rectlon has been given lmpetuB. case of begging the question. In Very well. Dat now are we jng Some of the lines that held us too many instances, under this sys- to get such a government? By keep to our ancient moorings have been tem, the people have not been really iBg on indefinitely . electing men to sundered, and as a state we are ready represented. The representative sys- office, and perpetuating ln power a to sail ln a swifter sea. Figurative- tem haa therefore demonstrably party, that serve these vast combl f, thesWare the product of what has faiied, to such an extent that It must nations, that take their bribes, that transpired the past week at the be corrected by more direct partld- do their bidding, that allow them to splendid grounds of the Country patlon of the people ln government rnn the government? Shall the club. Would Mr. Root claim that many masses of people keep on voting the j , It takes more man pacaing-nouses men high ln office who might be same way that the trusts do? Is to promote to Its utmost development mentioned really represent the that the way to get such a govern- the livestock Industry, it taxes tne ma88es of the people who elected ment? grandstand attachment The spec- them? Every time there is any kind of a tseular must be invoked. The man True, the people do get some fair movement among the people to wbb is to give ns the raw material representatives, and will get more, throw off the power of these inter ior the pack must be brought In con- bfJt &Q thu ut naTe either to ests, the Oregonlaif opposes It, and tact with a perfect type. He must abol,gh convention system, as In supports the very political elements aee a better animal than he ever Or.on and Wisconsin, or else their that have shown for 40 years that aaw before. Razor-backed hogs wont aelecatet mwt rraounc and defy they would not give the country the iewa i..-.-. """" the bosses, as In New Tork. Argu- una i a government waicn mat pa horned cattle wont do It Long- . .... ... An h per professes to desire. irggtru a u a wuu-vww v Our protective policy, although , un wise, was honestly commenced and con tinued by congress for th first 79 rears of our national life. ' Now It has Muuima not nrAt.etinn hut nlunder. It HE PREDICTED failure of crops baa resulted In a close alliance between in the "inland empire" this I corrupc Politicians ana manuraciurers ,, -. . . , iv. 1.IU1.UI. ,aIB1aa.vi. a. A ear was imwu uw latiurv. i means. We nave permitted a rorce ThA rrnna war not "bnmnnr "Icutsld of government to b created v a v.-a v. " ', that la powerful enough to oontrol go were somewhat Short Of the normal, I arnment In SDlte of the seonle. t: in some localities were light; but on I km ta control of th trust hav com the whole th harveat Is large, and 1.'." beyond" Saatrtron. th nrlRM are aneh that the harvest I any sou re. This 'confidence come from of gold will be perhsp. even greater uVwyUhTd.no p T Uo offlo actually direct every depart hla rorce : do It Not only win tney not roe a the omnlverous maw of th packing house, but 'they will not "pay -the - farmer for their keep. It la the - grade and th fall-blood that will give us the Industry. It Is the grade and a full blood that will giro the rrodocer hla profit - The great, smooth, care, th curved lines of rot lour, its plump, rotund sarface it at lBt-rt:s and eharas allk the v rf tt artist or th stockman i i:f are tt avruse to a saccnil ! peopl do rule, the J Pr P"f Philadelphia North American says; ' Tb bttterast pUl ever swallowed by machine bosaee was tb dose takes by OdelL Hendrirka. Barn. Pays. Alo rldga, War and gut Chainoaa Wood ruff. They were forced t aaactlott tb eaAtlag of 12? v4 oat ef that l. rev a snaa they bat, aad 1 tbetr hatred be lieve to be a weak candidate aai a prfl t tb party, bacaase b Is a peril t tbeir macbUML And It wrna beeaaa f warm frtettdsblp for Hsghe that Pra-it Roosevelt aad Jodg Taft Tort-4 those rvlortant ta gvbintt. It was baracae tb por4 et cnTy ef A XO-mO channel has been con strncted from the historic city of Ghent to the sea, one that will float ahips drawing 28 feet, largely for the purpose of bringing In American cot ton for manufacture. This Incident shows that European eltles not di rectly os th sea are much alive to the Importance of open waterways thereto: Ia .consequence of thla Im provement, a line of steamers will ran direct from Oalvevtoa to Ghent, than the average. t-v. a i..-. a..v..naij). I ment of the government. T au Dlw..u, B,-.u...,. . government, vet atlll estimates a total crop Of grain for mandlnr government Is becoming in eastern Washington, eastern Oregon th Unrted tates so powerful and cor a .v t. v ..1. ' , - r. 1 rapt that It alms to control th editor and the Panhandle of Idaho of 60.-i Ms sanctum, the professor in his 000.000 bushels, and that the total I lecture room and the judges in the seats ...... I nt tnatlca. expense or narvestmg it was--or I 8Uca extravagant expenditures of will be 16,000,000, Of only lOlPublle money as we have had In recent runt, a nnahol HnnrwMlnar that all I f.""""" . k ra o i rna revenue or rovemmenr were raiaaa the Other expenses Of production I by direct taxation. Our representatives -... i . , f..a. .. in congress would never dare to multl- of course only a rough estimate can pIy Africa-, approve thousands of un- be made are 20 cents a bushel meritorious private claims, enact waate- mnrm and Iha avrag nrlr-A rvArvAf t9t river and harbor bills and squander more, ana me average price received, tn. ptlbii0 money if the national ex- Wltn wheat at 1 CCnta preponderat-psea had to b defrayed by an overt, lar la S ronts A bnahpl. thar. f. . Irritating Ux dragging the money dl- "' ... T. aa aaa rctly from the cltUens" pockeU. Every net total profit of 121,000,000 on I revolution la English sod American grain alone for that region. This lslhta".r h" om out ot deiarminad op- perhaps $28 apiece for every human taxation I almost necessary to the ex- belng in all that region. - - Istence of fre government. Taie the c ,., ,v. v . , people's money from them without their So. though the wheat harvest was knowing it and by and by you oaa llgnt, as comparea wua last year. tax tneir iiDeniea. tariff an our friends th farmers of tbe in land empire as a whole will not suf fer from poverty or prlvatloa until another and a greater harvest comes around. The county commissioners la con sidering' the purchase of a tract of land la Caruthers" second addition for a county horpital regard It a a good bay. In polat of value, at t$0. tOw. and their jadgment ts probably roodV The asewtsreeirt ef th ta block carrying principally ct.?oa. Bat, ajror te rt throe rears hi fcu if la necewaary to maintain tb Sd fool la oeaoia. man ham twig la political Immorality. "In all tariff legislation." aar the national Re publican platform adopted at chicas-o. -tr.s tr principle or protertt Is best maintained br th Imposlttmi of such dutla as will equal th different? b twea th cost of projection at home an4 abroad." Before tii war- the slave owners ut the south xmded that slavery was for th protection of the eiava. o new the t'alted States, steel rrprtio-L th sagsr trust, the meat truat and tb bundrAds of ethar nMm. rite that ar plundering our Isttorlng nwi tnrovgn tne nvrreaaAq cost er 11 at. trig are mm I n It r 4 in tiem that for tst prtrtnn alona they awtn the t-f irf!t taHff. They ertuallv give rr-..i.'r.a t canptiin conmHte that i voters may be bought, that a lobby may oa maintained, tnat congressmen may be Interested, that th right men may be made Judges, that newspapers may t subsidized, and they do all this to keep the laboring people from falling- Into pauperism. In every market In our country today the wives of woriungmen, gripping In their hands the Price of their husbands' labor, are. pay ing iu mi great trusts tor tne neces saries of life at least 0 per cent more than they paid even 10 years ago. Our taooring man noes not need charity, but he does need Justice. "Tea," gald Tol stoy, "we will do almost anything for th poor man anything but gst off bis WCK. If oongress should attempt directly to fix the prices) at which our domestic nianuracturers could sell their products, the United States supreme court would declare the act unconstitutional. Tet congress Indirectly by means of Its taxing power and It right to regulate foreign commerce has maintained stat ute for SO years permitting the domes tic manufacturer to enhance tha nrtn. va vaia wKajsanea ox me to wvery man and woman in our land. The source of tne trusts couia h asuy destroyed by removing the tariff, but that would aton contributions - to campaign disburse ments, so our potltVcians continue the tariff and then as a remedy prescribe mai aiAiuua an intaratata commerce commission, administrative tribunals ana otner similar measure. Th trust niftitea nam th. tnliwa and minerals, they own a considerable part ef tbe remaining forest lands, they own th great railway systems, they control the majority of manufactoiica. and hold the franchises ef tbe cltlea. Through thee acquisition they have become tb ruler of our reoubllo with out holding any office whatever. But th peopl ar slow to ae th danger nf auch vaat and tfresponslbl Dovrr exerclaad by a few men becauee they plot tn secret and mine and countermine our OUD1IC lira. Kventnal v ir thev ar. not stopped they will reduce th Am erican people to servitude. Our smaller gianaracturera ar r ginning to realise whst this meana They ar coming to unaermana inai iney receive little bene fits from a protective tsrlff and that tn great rom bins t Ions which sell them their raw enatertai are the only reolpl enta of Ita benefits. Slsty-tw per cent ef all Importations Into our country to day ar for us lt enr man a fact urea ana more than ne-thlrd of this 1 r crnt is sub)ect ta dty. A iarg proportioe of er manufacturers will by nd by aiTreciate this trvth. and what thr do er-rreclate It their rnanctaj ntarests wiU maga then a fiahtlng urc against prctectlom. I My hand the thread, and said, "Since you Are blind, but one thing you can do. Sometimes th threads so rough and fast Ana tangiea ny, I Know wild storms are sweeping past. And fear that I Shall fall, but dare not try to find A safer place, sine I .am blind. I know not why, but I am sure That tint and place In some -great fabric to endure Past tim and race My threads will have; so, from the first. Though blind. I never felt accursed. I think perhaps this trust haa sprung From ona abort vnM Said over me when I was young So young, I heard It, knowing not that God's nam signed My byow, and sealed me his, though BkaCVt. But whether this be seal or sign. Within, without It matters, not; th bond divine I never doubt. I know be set me her, and still. And glad, and blind, I wait his will. But listen, listen day by day. To hear their tread Who bear the finished -web away. And cut tb thread And bring Ood's message In th sun. ....... vvv. aaaaaw rilUIVP WOri IS done!" William Pugsley's Birthday. Th Hon. William Puaslev ona nt ,1.. foremost political - figures 'in r.n.H. was born in Sussex, Kings county. New Brunswick, on September 17. ll&n Mi. father was a well-to-do farmer and sent his son to th University of New Bruns wick, where the young man graduated with the highest honors in IMA. Tbrn hs studied law and waa admit. practice In 1172. He did excellent work aa rr porter of th suprem court, aad established for himself a large practice Ha took great Interest In politics, and was elected to the leerialatlva ....ki of New Brunswick In llSS." Two years later he waa made maak.p nt ,h v.... He resigned In 10 and went Into the government service a solicitor-general Two years later he resigned to become "rcilr't A .th,a elure. He en tered the Provincial rovamman .. torney-general In 1100, and a year ago he became minister nt nnhiu th L wrier cabinet. This Date In History. 177S -Df. Benianfln Knit wilsstoaod surgeon of th Pennsylvania lf7S John Adams wag iDMlelavt con a I ess a coram luMoner to aegotlata a I trea.y with Great Britain. f ' 1114 Benjamin A. Gould. not ad tronomer. was bom hi Boaton. uimnnaga. jtovember If 1 111 lied Is .1,LT,, Stockton A srlfngton tlra. tha first railwsy which carried r-aaeen-tT.i.n Ct1,"d- t0T traffic 1114 The Confavtarata. ar.M ..,. tmm in battle at rort David-nm. 1I7S General Braxton T. Bragg djed Born March 11.' 1117. . It Theodor R"ina.l en. ait Ad the RAptihiicaa caaduiat for gevamor ot ew Tork. KSt Tha Iika . A l rw.K m Cemwan and Tork visited Re-,na. a.a. katrbewaa.