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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1908)
wmomk TAQE OF WE JOURNAL) THE JOURNAL t AN tMDCrCKDKWr KgWSrArfB. a . jack so.. . rvbiUkM fuelfc4 (wy mli aa-fUM e4 ' rr MUr horrli.l al Itie Javrmil Ball. b. ttft eo t.mkllf llrwu, MrlUB4. Or. rater. ( the ixMlorrto at rrtUa4. Or., ft trMialaJoa t.rMik tea Mil at mw4Um bm , X-l -rHONr MAIN Small Change Perhape Chairman Mack will' get make? They will of course Insist on I ixently. Oregon, wtll sain added f am deciding this themselves, and in writ- yearly (or Ita fruits,' lta lumber, Its loj the tariff schedules, aa they hart j livestock, and Its dairy products. aone in ma last two lanrr laws,: ma Jonrnal la dad to be Here to swat next ' 7 . : ""V. . . . w' . ! rarm.ra would, rather hava mora rain iuo j rum .v i au per ttni, i uvuiont. ioa io aein u along. Aioai ana jm politics. ant F S I a n r fc a n a nn h,-n. . ! I hnnl n V.I. Jft .!... -4 1... . f '" - ' " "ivi I fwis,. vnu UEIU Ik MVU, V IW I .. I. ... .v. tn-b ni -n-. tw- tKI.V VI. I II, ti- -.lb ... - . I . .. 1 .. . ium.s v. ...... v; tu.up. .l 1 inwu, .,.' U fcl UCVB V U - T VV U Out a 100010 RSnC- "reasonable." Icaaloo. Write letter. praising Ore- Mr. Taft In a speech Saturday said I ion. - Treat the Immigrants well. " We Want a .Clianre ! 11 (rrotn lh Commoi.tr.) . an A iM au rrr,JZZ hV br -.-.' that the protective aratem. rlichUy Divide tin the bit tracta of land and T'aihn?,?iTtI.r "ut carried out. would encourage com- sell them at reasonable price. uy I petition and reduce prlcea, This la J Oregon made coeds. Patronize home Sr"U academic." The theory industry Raise more poultry and no"i uno uui in pracucg. 11 wii iiui. uui nu ui lua irun yooio. with thla same theory, along with a I Build good roads. na.l. MuiMliia-. tf Mfih eeanne. Mew ! 10vT-l bvjfa ItulliUa.. t-u.f. Xt him thattla without ala axnooa yon ,c.i in nrat aiona." , . a Tf ona trayala much la Oraaon now. I oa ran scarcely roiia a rair. 1 N - V Othar bl- onaa baaldaa Harrlmaa a) Hill hava their ejraa on Orafoo. . la laa . . . , . . . ... I . . . . , . . . . I WV . UWDIU.W M I 101 pi omer eopnisu-y ana ciap.rapi ine .use or larger inings la aiit aitandej avan to the rallaa woman. Oka faar. . Ona far. da n r. ' 15.00 I Ona swat... Bl'KDAT. 11. AO I On o-Mtk.. PA1LT AND SCNPAT. , 7 60 Dm neat... Which countT la rolnr to do moat and the beat road building T bus. thai Oat JTui Cfrtiort tAsl tin cimlaOo ef ua oxoor jctnt-AvZ. Im 0fkram4 gtanuHtJ by tl 4 rtiWr'a CWtiaW Cimlttio Blot Boot About the benefits of protection to hand. Get Into the spirit of It, and I jo I farmers and worklngmen, that mil- be a part of It Hons of voters hare been fooled a m I .v. l -i . i o. i, i. -ki.ri .-.iA ,, ... .u.o iuu7 7r. out, iaej are gpi- v-,.., VW4,.v Tomorrow, aeoordlna- to nroiram, ba ting their eyes open lately. High dissatisfied with .themselves" who Ulna a "dark" season for the rad-lifbt uiairicu , 9 How would It do for a cabinet tneet- Inr to dlsouaa thosa collection of Cor- taijou ST .1 J Tbm tAptMA prormd by mrtttifiioa Out IA timlAUea Irtordl Ar4 htpl with ranr iW (A rmbini lmtrd wtiA auck metmrmry thmt &rtmrt mty nly am any tfttmtmu ar w mot or car puwmam amwmAip a manArtanmi Ufatiml avtamba . lsoL aranrij A aawhr A Fix It la not believed that Mr. Roeka- foller'a book will add appreciably to I WhlohaTer William la elected, there I If. the prealdent runa out of other ODjecia ot peraonaj atiacx. mere la ai- protectlon results in combinations, I will .vote for Mr. Bryan, we are told. elimination of the weaker concerns, Well, we suppose few people are en and monopoly; then prices go up, tlrely satisfied with themselves, so and what the trusts call "reasonable I perhaps Mr. Bryan's majority will be profits" flow In. I very large. But we have heard or It Is probable that If Mr. Taft had read somewhere that a good many hia wealth. the Job entirely In his own hands he voters, whether dissatisfied with would make a beneficial revision of themselves or not, were considerably I win be mora "poise" in the next ad tV. tmrttt Vi- V. -...14 .-! If I A lao-f (of laA rftl tVi .v t)i- irnnrn. I mjniairUOn, little In the right direction. He I ment has been conducted during the would not be controlled by the trusts past few years. Some are dlsaatla- w,?u RnEomiclly Wmn,(1 n-'bod', as mucn as some oiners. uut nis uea witn me Kooseveic policies, ana position Is necessarily weak, because I some are dissatisfied with the Re- he declares for nothing positive and I publican leaders for rejecting them. I ways old Colonel Stewart, specific, he advances a theorr that I Some are dissatisfied on account of I everybody knows utterly falls In the tariff, some on account of th 1 if f?.. aSi't brinV irl practice, he manifestly seeks to I trusts, eome on account of the panic, Immigrants here, nothing will. avoid giving offense or alarm to the and others for various reasons. To I ' , . . ,' protected Interests, and he stands sum It all up, Bryan will be elected, That laat bia- acheme of his waa enouch committed -to a Hearty indorsement If at all, not by. men who are "ala- w Break anybody's constitution. of the last and preceding congresses, satisfied with themselves," or on rHI0 JOITRNAL reprinted Satur-J that refused to revise the tariff In I that account, but by men, and a I day am article from the Boston I any partlcnlar. great number of them Republicans . Globe rounded on government I 80 on this question the people of too, who are dissatisfied with the statistics, showing that the the country who are earnestly In fa-1 Republican party, cost or irnni Has gone on increasing vor of a revision of the Urlff, not right up to the present year, not- upward but downward, have nothing Collier's Weekly uses a little of Its withstanding: the reduction of wages to hope for ,n the election of Mr. supposedly valuable editorial space m man, bmbb, ana u, -urowmg 1 Tart. He Has saia tne last congress to remara: out of employment, of hundreds of J was all right, and so he Is commit-! 'Mr. Roosevelt is a Republican. Ha thousands of men. And an official I ted to an aDDroval of the next eon-1 has, from time to time, ventured, .Adam Dede. famoua ai the hnuaa humorist and personally popular with men ol all parties, but con spicuous as a . Cannon lieutenant. went to the oeoolo of Minneanta- and asked for reelection, and the people said: ' "WE WANT A CHANGE t" ' John I. Tenlcina. another Cannon 'lieutenant, went to Wisconsin and asked for reelection and the peo ple said: "WE. WANT A CHANGE P Senator Fulton went' to Oregon. and asked for reelection, and the people said: .- "WE WANT A CHANGE 1 Senator Hansbrouirh went to North Dakota for reelection, snd the people said: , . "WE WANT A CHANGE!" Senator Kittreds-e heard it In South Dakota, from the people:' "WE WANT A CHANGE r Senator Long asked the people of Kansas for reelection, and the people shouted! ; "WE WANT A'CHANafir Senator Hopkins went to Illi nois and asked for reelection, and two-thirds f the Republicans of Illinois announced: "WE WANT A, CHANGEI" Almost one-half of the Republi cans of Iowa, even when asked by uieir aisttnguisnca cnstor aiii- son, replied:, '. "W: WANT, A CHANGE r Senator Ankeny went to the state of Washington and asked for reelection, and the people said: "WE WANT V A CHANGE!" The voice of the people is un mistakable.. Wherever they have had a chance to speak, they have earnestly lifted their voices, say ing:. - , ; . ; ( "WE WANT A CHANGE!"; Iht RLALM FILMININL wt M .' IXC1-GASED COST OP LITim But Uncle Joe, If reeleotad, may play being good from December to March 4. If defeated stop up your eara. a It la curious that Roosevelt could not I see that he could not reform thing I wunout Knocaing out tne KepuDlican party. TLat Sentiment Is pweeping Liountry " We Want a Clianpfe! " THE LUMBER RATE CASE Mr. Gear Bays there ous-ht to ba BO.-1 uvu majority ror Mart in uregon. -fut many Kepubllcana are going to vote as wey mum. Probably Mr. Archbold thinks that From the San Francisco Chronicle. Arguments on the Southern Pacific's application for an injunction to pre vent the enforcement of the Interstate Bottling drape Juice. ' S HAPB juice haa become ao m f , portant arUcla In the dietary II a-i well regulated houae- - holds must hava a Supply of this delicious beverage on band for the winter. . Oregon Concords are now at their beat and with a little ears In the preparation,, home bottled grape Juioa may ba had. . . For grape juioa good bottles are to ba preferred ta fruit -. . t ... . -J'" bottie".' .ucb'.. popJ beat to u.a. othor hottlea will do, but ba verv careful ti at.riii v. vl'..,. Wash the grapea and rlrk from the kltu? aUtA 'ru!t '! lha prervl?; 5.5 .,nd eruah all.ht y. Heat alowly h-tV1 ." otm eo'-ixler over a large bowl and ani-Mit ,,..-. "7 jCu?.?7orln:' h."fruUa" . Put the strained 1ulna la . t. serving kettle and on -the flra. When It bolls UD. draw hark mnA .-i-. !. boil up again and skim; then add the ugar and atlr until dlsaotved. Boll flva mlnutee. eklmmlng It carefully. Fill hot sterilised Jara or botUea. Put the r uuiii-a m a moaarata oven for 0 mlnutea In tuina r H-uT-. -. Have eoma boiling juice and pour a lit-1 tie of It Into the jara to overflow as they ara taken from the oven: thea aeaL Place on boarda and- aat um, . . oold draft, . A good prODOrtlon nf auaar la 4it of augar to a quart of Juice. , t at Traveling Medicine Case. T Is very silly for anyone to go away on a trip of a few days or a few weeks without simple little reme dies that one knows all about and which are Intended for simple Ills. Drug stores are plentiful. It Is true. and doctors are many and In all sorts of queer placaa, but there la the suddon Of the state of Washington made arraa If It makes a like record The nevertheless, to express his views of Mr. Hearst has mistaken hie calling commerce commission's order fixing the . - ... ----v. . I . l .v . .,!. Ihil h- ahnnlH h nlnvln- rlia .tar in I r.1-Kt -nr. n- -n h -.' tl- report last wees snowing mat tne protected Interests are. all for him. """ " vv"- ---- -1- - ,-.-,... - ...-.. .,.. ...... ... -.!, , ,r"t,-l''u iuioicDt. .io i o.ii iui uiiu, found. Take, for in- xna . , ber ahfcments between the Willamette ' . LI andThv cann0t foret thJ lf eleced atance, thla opinion: If it Is not so already, PorUand 1. valley Tnd San Francisco ended before per cent since 1900. As a rule when - Nobody can reasonably expect a cannot cap, from the faot that sure soon to be incomparably the great- the United states circuit Judges yea- the demand for labor fans off and Republican congress to revise the it was no credit to the Republican party tli Tmcolll trmlnu" f S&J'toSlStto'&L wages are reduced, when there is an tariff so as to hurt any trusts or helo of the house that Mr. cannon should . The federai attorneys feel confident the homes in lranortance I tnat their demurrer to the application cornea the schools: hence everybody WI" ausiainea on ine name grounu Next to Industrial depression, some partly! the people, for there is Its long rec- be one of its leaders. cuinpeusttLmg uecreaso in u cobi i or)j Cf ever-increasing duties, and Mr. Kooseveit apaite tnus.nerore his 8nouid take lively interest in the on which It was upheld Wednesday. Of living follows but It seems fromlrefusa to lower any, and Republican position in the party wa so high. Pos- Sunday Journals school department. An,1,.,f th,a 18 done tne railroad will these reports that such has not been BUCCC88 this fall will be excusably hl ln,on ,n . th '"teryening . ... foercedroto "loSIJ r o7 Sfbf. rin'S the Case in this Instance. ' - tmod as an Indorsement of this ,ea.r hV th.same. L,T".rrSflrClT once again before the commission and Yet during the last few years. rr.. ;v.,r V:.; arguing new racts m support or us ''fnt P-. contenPion That the rite isunjuat and vphAM 1L fo nn An wareici aTaMlaine hla I Decause so many form nromiees rev sion. but the . -7 V",, Knsivrr ri nnrt. v. ""r"'"""'? lw: of life are con- party h"aa never considered Itself at .aIerul ? mo,re. may begin tob.ii.ve that the' trust. U. w3t.V OrSaW hat fix prices to In k- "ooseven nas never vemurea 10 re- noi ior xi turers1 association 1 construed as an Indorsement of this What la the reason? Principally, policy by the people. True, the plat- it appears propaoie. of the . necessaries trolled by trusts, .t suit themselves. A monopoly can then revision upward instead of p?at P-blIclv thJs opinion, and on the suspend the law of supply and de- downward would be revision, and re- adjournment of the last and worst mana. iorui can at any time umn .(.u,.,,.-,. u. , in -""6"bb, mi. uii wiiu(ucuw- - ' T (. 1 V IDIUIa UlWSSjaV AAMtJ W V U AAA. W U I me suppiy., ana .9 pss a aemana rlabje ruld un(jep th) Republican iur im uuiuuuk (iui, uu iua uiaraei. ui 1 pftrty ed it (and necessarily Cannon) on Its excellent work. V Teal, counsel for Lumber Manufac- and sbeclal counsel for the interstate commerce 'commis sion, made the closing address yester day morning, and his argument waa so uncomfortably pointed that It brought' repeated interruptions from trie rail roads lawyers, who ala not conceal their anxiety in their efforts to stop many cases has been done. Take the case of , eteel rails. A great deal of railroad building is to be done in Oregon. The rails will cost .many hundreds of thousands of dol lars. - The railroads must pay $8 per ton more for these rails than an Eu- ; j-opean. railroad builder would have HASKELL- AND OTHERS. Senator Beveridge is a somewhat Oregon Sidelilit3 A Dalles melon weighed 44 pounds, a The Clatskaale school haa 209 pupils, him from crowding them into Igno minious defeat. Teal accepted these what then? Ha is one: In the Republican camn to pay for the same rails laid down are a ' thousand worse. , ' in Liverpool or Hamburg. Tne men who will build the, railroads in Ore gon will charge up this excess to the people of the state, and probably col lect. It many times over, in high freight rateB, which our farmers and We all know most of their names; they have been reprinted until they are familiar Aid rich. Cannon, El- Tha 'Salem public schools employ SI 1 Interruptions with poor grace and made Bueiry Kuansn w every aruiuiy wuruua oojection or tne company a counsel. Teal's strongest point was the fact that the amended interstate commerce act met the railroad's contention at its er ht to aDDear In court with evidence which had not been nrevloualv submitted to nn nrnnnr nlnrn tn . dohnt hfcrnimo Ail xamnui county towns are good the commission, ana that on this snow no proper piace in a aeoaie, Because , h t wouM h difficult to find hno- r.b..rin, wnnM h a-mnt-d there are no free traders In active one showing; the business, activity now Under the amended act this was sce- nnHtlpa nd no frp trade la nndfir manifested in Sheridan, saya the Sun. cifically denied. The carrier is now pontics, ana no rree iraae is unaer Kverybody ls busy and tha smile of required to give the commission the contemplation by Mr. Bryan or any contentment ls both broad and long. first opportunity to review new evl Democrats. A tariff for revenue with Jenc or evidence which, through Home or tne large aiiaira growers in """V"""" f - progfesslve statesman, ordinarily a teachers. ....... . I fair rlohatsr nnrl n rlAnn nnrl rflnprt- I .- v win ti in 1. a UMiTiiNU an mat is cnargea 1 . C. 7.7 t, V V rv I . '-' n . ito.vii. .0. n I BDie iiKure in puuiic iub. dui m that he ls guilty of everything hIs epeeches he frequently uses the The Newberg public d,ttctPth.tc"?er'ahidththe Ur"i ...w w- v.. j I terms "free trade" and "free trad- school, number nriy son. 01dacA tnAcrrAe.r ."M."0 '1$ 1 01 which no una ucen accuse-1 .. . . . . , ., . . I " era, wnicn are misieaamg ana nave kins Dalzell Crane.' Payne. Hop- on,y lncldental Protection is not free thrMer?iii cou'ntfy' have made a r" miltA m the original hearing Kins, iaizeii, V00' rynf,' p trade, and ought not to be SO des- ductlon in the price of hay. which has A f-ase cannot be partially tried be klns, Sherman, Du Pont, Tawney, BUU ""K"1- w c resulted in several large sales, 3,009 'ore the commission," declared Teal Penrose, Iorlmer Hemenway, Ford- Ienatea- inerchantB, 8nduItUnately everybody Burrowy-the Hat is too long who Bhlps produce or buys goods, will have to pay. .This is a sample of how the protective tariff benefits these people. , Bo with a great number of more common necessaries; the tariff pro tected trusts keep up the price what ever, the "times," and we the people fcave to "pay, pay, pay." That a great . many people ; are seeing this to take space for who have run this government for the past four or more years, and who will continue to do so unless Bryan and a Demo cratic congress are elected. The gang ls fighting for Its life. It finds a chance in Haskell to di vert attention from the real game. Every one of these and a hundred short-sighted. If deposits were guar anteed, they would be far larger. who did not see It formerly is the otb(" toolsof. the re reason why we hear few of them supporting Taft hurrahing for a protective tariff Not that Taft is a bad man. but these days. mey iear xtryan. nuuBeveii never ' But it niay pe Bald that if consum- Jarred them- Taft uld nyeT H ers have to pay more, farmers and reaze tnem- 18 Denoiaen 10 mem. There ,g n0 good reason for fric other producers have been getting He belongs to and with them, par- tQn between tne county cflnirt and hetter prices. This is largely illus ory. The wheat growers have been getting good - prices, but the tariff does not have any effect one way or the other on the price of wheat, or other cereals of which we raise a sur plus to send abroad. And as to beef cattle, the beef trust sees to it that . while consumers are held up for higher prices, very little if any of the Increase gets into the pockets of the cattle raisers. The only ones possibly benefited by a high tariff are the wool growers, the cane and beet sugar raisers, and the growers of vineyards and semi-tropical fruits in California and Florida. tons being; sold at J 7. There are at present 4.000 head of beef cattle that In the resolutions 'adopted by the w'" .D l"1 10 tM Merrm ftira"a Bankers' association, the one odoos- ing postal savings banks gave as one ft. reason the fact that the loss to of three blooded bear hounds, which dftnoairnra has been so small as to are warranted tot tree anything In the . " . . ; country. 11 wouia pe a gooa joiie lr be absolutely a negligible Quantity' they'd tree Bre'r Harriman and hold This being so. how is It going td "'m"t " agreed to build the Drain "ruin" the banks to provide the "nAirlle-lhlA" tar necessary to insure Salem Statesman: Laat spring tha in . , - nu- or eastern people was becoming so deposits? The bankers themselves great that the necessity of new houses Decame imperative, inuring the summer firtA hmiRM want nn Fs.tArn.r. .till sltlon. Besides, we believe they ard flock here, --the university, pubiio tisanly. Bryan is independent of them. They would have to begin to scurry lf he were elected, JVdmit. if you please, all that is said against Haskell and kick him Then turn around and you will need a thousand-toed boot to kick worse fellows who are attacking him. THE GREATER OREGON. T TAFT AND THE TARIFF. M R. TAFT was unfortunate in making In his acceptance speech the statement that some duties should be raised. without specifying what they vere nor why they hould be raised, and without at the same time stating that not only some duties but most duties should be reduced, and that In no case should duties be so high as to permit the formation of a trust and the monopolization of a product But Mr. Taft 'said nothing of this kind then, nor since, hence he ls in sands of people here to live. bo position to command or Invite the i will settle up Central Oregon, HE JOURNAL believes Oregon ls going to grow from this on much faster than ever. Men are frequently heard to re gret the opportunities they have lost by not doing this or that, or making such or euch an investment, long ago, but there are more opportun ities in Oregon than ever, and the number and variety of them will In crease for years to come The long predicted and walted-for era of railroad building is at hand, and this arose will within a compara tively short tlpae double the popula tion of Oregon. Not only Mr. Har riman will build, but Mr. Hill, and the St. Paul road is certain to build a line of its own to Portland. These great railroad building enterprises. announced and talked of throughout the country, will bring tens of thou- They will the sheriff in the matter of working the prisoners, and there should be none. The public service is of far greater importance than any of ficial's obstinate or prldeful opinion The sheriff ls the custodian of the prisoners, but he ls to work them under he direction of the county court- Of course there ls a chance here for a1-clash of authority, but there ls also ample room for har monlous cooperation. It comes to The Journal that hired street-corner and curb-stone patriots are trying to induce worklngmen not to participate in that anti-Taft dem onstration. Part of a campaign fund wasted, we imagine. Worklngmen have as much right to demonstrate as trusts have to connublate. It will be a hard job either to bribe or scare worklngmen this year. A Chicago dispatch says that the Republican managers feel that what is needed is another Mark Hanna. Very likely the late Mr. Hanna is greatly missed; he was rather a rare mac; but even he could not do now what he did in 1896 and 100. Times have changed. The people have learned considerable since then. schools, business college and normal school have opened and the demand la aa great aa it waa last spring. a - What has always been considered tha lmposniDie' naa practically happened Pendleton's tenderloin district has all but been wiped out says the East Ore gonlan. The mayor recently ordered the women to move from the quarters they have long inhabited, but it was sup posed they would find others, but the consequence la tnat most of them have leu town. a While on hia way east, being com fmiea 10 atop over at ugden for a Ime. Milton Newlin of Newberg waa accosted by a atrane-er whn ln-t nine in getting nuite rami liar, aked about Newberr and lnniitrari if lull-. knew J. C. Colcord. ea.ihler of the Bank ui jvwoerff. wno ne haia waa hi, mu.in Of course Milton said he did and then a hard luck atory was told and a loan of a round hundred was asked for Just for an hour or so. Falling to meet with a hearty response he dropped In hia little request to 130. hut Vntnn did not bite. a a G. Hoitkemner. Jr form rlw Af tn-. land, now of Klamath Falls, has been vial tin a: San Franrlarn an4 on hi. turn telle the Herald: ' "You would ba surprlaed how well known Klamath Falls Is down in California Thla is better known In Ban Frahclacn than any of the large cities In tha United states. Just the mention of Klamath Falls attracts more interest and att.n. tlon than would that of New York n. Chicago. Nearly everyone yon talk to a planning to coma here tn tha sDrin. or some time next year. Some want to come for pleasure and some for business. They all seem ta ha -. qualnted with tha proposed automobile road to Crater Lake, and I rant nr. to say that when it Is built thousands of cars will coma in here every ysr r - surporf of genuine tariff revlelonh;-. Mr. Taft ls unfortunate, too, io agreeing with the Republican plat form on this subject, which declares not only for soch protection as will equalize the labor cost of products here and abroad, bat that will afford "a reasonable profit to mancfa torer-." As tas often been shown. vry . low acbedBlee of duties would art onp:if h the forme- purpose, but to tre latter who are t- decide a -at prof.U man .facturars and e'-ar protected interests a-oal-. spread along the coast, will swell the population of the Willamette valley and Southern Oregon. The colonist rates are helping to bring thousands of them now, but we may expect a far heavier tide of Immigration neit year. Electric lines are being buiH, snd more of them will be bsilt. Farm-1 leg will become .mora systematized Members of the legislature should be especially interested spectators of the present attempt to enforce an old law that has remained In the present state too long on the statute books and should be considering Its proper amendment next winter. In the course of hia arcument "The carrier must make lta case first before Letters From tke People Lettera to Tie Journal should be written 08 one aide of the papar only, and ehould be ac companied by tbe name and addreaa of tha writer, me name win not oa use. 11 i writer take that It ba withheld. The Journal ta not to ba underatoed aa indorsing the vmwi or atatFBiente of correspondent. Letter ebould do maae aa oner aa poiaioie. xno wno tbelr letters returned when not used should In close pottage. Correapondenta are notified that letters eeedlnc 800 wbrda in length may, at the dis cretion of the editor, be cut down ta that limit The Ounce of Prevention. Portland, Or.. Oct 6. To the Editor of The JournaJ I cannot refrain from congratulating The Journal on Its ed itorial on,the "Scarlet Woman." In Sun da ya issue. While differing from the editor In aome minor respects, I can say amen to tha large part of tha ed itorial iln ciuestion. To make the life of the scarlet woman harder by driv ing her from practically protected dia trlcta may be perplexing to her, and to aome cruel, but tenda to make the trade which aha piles a mora difficult one. I have often thought that more study ? riven to an honest and practical at empt to save women from entering such a life would result in vastly more good than appeals for the fallen wo man. The editor is right in assuming that thousands of women in Portland are today havina? as hard a struggle to make an honorable llvtng as tbe women of the north end would possibly encoun ter should tney De permanently . anven from their awful trade. I heard it said that these women are unfitted for hard work. It la doubtless true, but It is also true that hundreds of women In Portland today, who ara earning; a live lihood for themselves and families, ara unmted ror the continuous ton wnicn is 'their dally measure. Many of them waka In tha morning ao weary 'that to attempt to work would be Impoxnlble if they sava a thought to the .bodily wvajuiwa Many young girls in our department torea ara carrying burdena that ara all to heavy to bear. Weary and worn, aa- tha commission and must a-o back to I ailment at nlo-ht nr iti nn tha, train the commlasion whenever It feela that I or in .oma atranr. nlara wh vn new facts to be adduced will hrin OT ,n uomm lran Place, whan you about a modification of the cnmmia. want a remedy at once. alon'a orden. It was on thla very point Noi "V thla, but if you ara visiting that the act waa amended In order to fou on ' WW1 10 " noateaa remedy tha defect In tha. arioinal or the' little every-day drug you should statute I nve with you. "The rallroarcannot atand"ln this I If r In the habit of needing a court on a bare allegation. It must certain kind of medicine prescribed by show some fact or facts which will vou.r d2f,toJ"'b5 ur tht yu hvS. th. give it a standing In a court of equity, hottle fllled before leaving home. Don t It la due this court and tha commls- merely take the prescription, sion that, before a call la made for in addition, you want bicarbonate of the issuance of an inlunction. aome oda' aromatic-spirits of ammonia, lla- facta shall ba adduced to show that Jer,n ",la: ,mlnti "lul or n tablet the party complaining is in danger of for.m' nd triturates of calomel and injury. When the commission took Ja .. . .. .... . . up thla case, ha railroad presented rl'woy, -uu " or neao- ir. m v.,,, nav.r ....tn nn. At i, I ache coloKne In any of the tiunaent make the claim that the rate proposed makes that ara refreshing on a hot day waa so low that it amounted to con-1 or,on ;.ufry 'P;., ,, flscatlon. In fact,' tha railroad has hesl- ",n w,,1t.n tnes.eKboU,ef da small tin t tn ab th, ti. .tin in i,. I case filled with ready-made mustard amended bill and only dares to say aa plasters and a small jar of powdered much -In tha course of its argument. oorax. ... ,, . . it ! a .t.fiHnn that ...h.t . v.n.n. Do not fail to add a roll of medicated out by the facts, and this la well trause and" anoUier roll of antiseptic known ' 'J plaster. Teal' closed his address with an elo- " J0" bayen't a little medicine case, quent plea for tha act declaring that hl?h JltnJuxJZ It afforded safeguards not only for f1,,1,"0 dEVgh8V?t" ,fi k 1 doA "ttu carrier ana snipper out. ror tne greater 1 """' pubiio which waa Interested. Ha said M JeietJvty rtrfc. aotr.rn.v..ni Vnl haan aV.,.ln. I Beets At nlKUt Dlr tilS .-(flit Of ft XliatC.I for years to: Inculcate In the minds of J.4,,. , .. i.u,n.. a tk. ..n.. u. i.in. 1 if vou must carry 'these in your sult- that they ware .engaged;, in a public caa or. bag, .WP-V' b.A 1 'f0 V,1!. business, operating as" government i?? SjtLnAr.arArnr,al.inS." agents and, therefore, subservient to Ilfi'S his " J "Jjl the Interests of the public. -n , batting la well pushed In "The constitution." said ha, -waa around tha stopper it will keep it from never framed as a refuge for corpora- any chance of leaking, tlons which are violating tha law. The at at K people will not tolerate any auch view.l -, No commercial' people can submit to Ful Moving Tune. havlnsr their lives placed at the dis-1 T l.ni irinr Uniimi. mnv. possl of some trafflo manager of aome A ,., - -,n. railroad or at the disposal of the rail- A town. "y" a wr"er ,n tha FV road itself. Hera Is a statute which delphla Telegraph. Then wa hava has been carefully framed to do injus- new scenes, new faces, a new Jnnltor. tice to no one and yet to aubserve the . . , . .... ... , larger interests of the general public. "BW - uw uuuyU.u ... If the bars are let down In this In- getting to our of flees; yea, and new atance the court will have absolutely lodge routee. Alsd aha will get hew destroyed a law which has been years ei,. v., . i. ti. in the making and which is now one by longer move. The old of tha strongest bulwarks of tha neo- furniture aeemed good enough before. I The children arnt alnna- ninelv with It V ana 100m 11 apart wun aaimraoie bkiu. ji Uawav,, l.av. It to th m-lfa with v end. If young women and young men h wanderlust to nick out a aanar of as well, were taught before they at- moverB who csn transform your side tain to the estate of vounar manhood h.r. . a nnr,irn.... i.t. v.c le . nA and womanhood, the value of virtue. I . .n t i.in.iiina. 1.1.1. Vor h.H. tha knawing remorse and agony of re- springs and distribute your antiques pentence which inevitably followa a loss nd Srt objecta among their relatives ui wS'.rJT , v 1 r wil friends. She will weep bitter tears from taklhV the fatal ateo which in the I v. r,. ..,, .tn case X the womaii is so difficult to re- about the twelfth and thirteenth move anUniSS "0 beln 40 bel5ev they ra. .tear, of - " " 1 wnereiore tnia wireiy paasioat ror Y.i..r T.l.;. ... vii. roving? lou win never get " ...... ."X""'?. " . ,,' ""iaDie answer from from California." Mr. Bryan's Rebuke. From tha Atlanta Journal. It baa bean a long time vines Amert- peclally during the buay season, they bravely go on. Knowing;, n tney give 11 a thought that the other life Is open, Eight years of Taft. then Roose velt again, ears Son-in-law Nick Long-worth. Thea Roosevelt will and Intensified. Industries to which choose his successor arsia. perhaps various sections of the state are e- j Kt rmlt, aad young Charley Taft peciaily adapted will develop rapli- will also be la line for Ihe throne. ly. ManIactnri.x wLU Increase i L t xuajba I.CL 1c) with at least an aDoarant -drantaaa or eonvon ana leeeemng or 10 il It la certainly the duty of good wo men to open the way , to give the wo men who are willing to leave a life of ahame an opportunity to reform and do honest work. But It ta doubly tha duty of women to make tha Uvea of working women easier. The women of Portland. lr united in tne effort, could make a eueoeeeful demand for a better wage for v--i iwuu, uu - pr-uu i or ins themaeivea. or fewer bargain aalea. The vlgoroua aad dignified rebuke which Mr Bryan has admtnlatered ta tha meddlesome chief etecutl va of tha l nlted ftatea. and tha term a ta which na conveya hla cbalienae demand that t he Iroperloua wielder of tha biar antck, in tha laagvara of tha etraet a ball "p.t li or .not up President Roosevelt baa for aome time a bow. a cmwinc diatwvsitlna to display that "pernicloua activity" which be baa as sternly f orbf Hen ta wards -r-to his aaderllnra. N"t content to diet at tha aotrtne-) ef bia party, who is ie carry aai run ponrieax iu naa grmo- oally gtjrnei t',, furrfirma nt tha chainnaa af tbe Kr ru o i i a carrpa'aa e Hta-j ta aa ateat that tha latter hai trees tfeposad ta evcrrLhlna est fcAcaa, . houaewya who employ hnnawmalda could plan for them more comfort soma noars ires irom toil, a room avaa vary simple, where thev can recelv their rnenaa. witno-t aeeklnr the etreets and eomatimea more questionable plaoes. b- cu. m,r I 101 a spot IB tBa DOmO where they can Invita a friend Tha prir of wearinesa. whli-h many women are giving for harvtr In thla city, would aatoniah ma or a thourhtleaa wo man. Ona of tha rrylnc aaeda of tba day ta a mora lat-Ulrewt knawledre n yonais women eo.ceralna soma of tha tr-kara to M. the ordinary rirl rives Wttle thowrht. If alrla w-r teM tat there in danrer Ib apt tns th varietr of youns ea who ara a whit lesa r n (a -i.ra ttia. aha has bea tar.aht r en. at there weuU be fewer denlsaas ef tha aorta'cratad blabof.of aaaaaehoatts. re as on -a-.m k-. llnai a Via- XAik 1 - . . -1 11 1 bviu mud a 1 viii iva - " Wilt youni wuinwii avna mciu.nuiiiy. youiiK r-us -.., ii- -n-iaa M .t . a a. a m " ' . 1 - va aa. iiwio L-aaca uiou iiifcu m aa, -1 men. in.piwr iu ui rei.iiva vaiuca not flt eor a clay eater. Just Because. wnicn win saieguara tnem rrom many r,..f n.n.. h. r t ..in. h. ir 1.1' ....... r . i..t,i I taDiea ana cnaire aDout tne same oi l i.1'.1 C,0ld,.'e !k m.? Jr?ll? om' J""' Because ahe tired of. the larera minority of the yoUna women ofl... t ..k ...u.. .. Zi2ait?t QZH?? iJLVwuX : J-- Because the children sol would exact from the young men with BO weii acquainted on the block that whuuj iiiv L'"" .v iw. Uttle Johnny couldn't acquire more than rioEiymX-n Because tha hired girl "got "aot'' I would do mora for the extermination 1 in t... ,r..- 1 Ti,.- i ..tT.ij J h.inZiZ ' I you knew the way home so well you ""!"."," "T,.r could nn it in tne aara and wnue par eqrY.Lppl"? JlrmA.I0.V.Ittii.V. .-";.. tially asleep, and Juat Becauae the . K Vr. '"".".v? i." tradespeople had become too monoto- ior weaneaaay niajni, ox una weea win nnu.i, nnlJte. All of whlrh la mnralv 5T"?-tt inlW. "'he nVtand few o? ..,-.rJ f.n ir.J. r -Hr ;k her nueoanaa ever live to near tnom all. SX?,,n.i1inia,etaa;?5 t,S?Ioh S2 or- mayhap, they may acquire tha mov u??a.1,..w?.rk'. r,?..1""";?,'?. ; 1" habit themselves and move clear Hi 1 Or UIiailB Ul l.i ISJ Ct 1KB UUCailUII. l ,, K Alaa ai..i-a.lAi net . U - a- KUMantatlna I V - V V I.11C1I WeUIU.l tUT lllf ItlBIVa as ACII, ror this greatest evil or moaern, or any other times, will ba discussed. TMa convention 'commences Tuesday even ing, October 6, In the Taylor - Street Methodist EnlscoDal church and contln- .... .... ... .n..l.. ... I til and Including Friday evening. Let " ed thoroughly. Cut into everybody come. Mrs. tjnruh and Mra. quarters and put In tha preaervlng J? wn "g?akT Ydr7.t',a5i kettle. Barely cover with water (about V v , A-tufLTTLi -J CVS.. Stains A IIUI niaj tutill- x k m Apple Jelly. WASH, stem and wipe the apples, being careful to clean tne blo- in- and Friday evening will ba tha Dia- mona meant contest. ADA WALLACE TJNRUH. Prank H. Hitchcock's Birthday, Frank Harris Hitchcock, chairman of tha Republican national committee and manager of tha campaign for tha elec tlon of William H. Taft as prealdent. waa born October (. ,1887. at Amherst, Ohio. He was graduated from Harvard unlvereity and latter attended Colum- dis uw acnooL in ll, he entered tba government service at Washington as a clerk, while, a cleric ha read law and became Interested in politics and after serving as assistant aecretary to tha Republican national commutes be waa made chief clerk in the department of commerce and labor whence ha was promoted to tha position of first as sistant poatmaster-general. Prior ta tha Republican national convention tn Chi cago laat June air. Hitchcock waa In itiated with tha rr-nna rement of tha eastern end of Mr. Taft's campaign for ui presidential nomination. - This Date ta History. 1T1S An expedition of Brttlen and Provlnelals appeared before Port Royal linaoi. 1711 Zr rera Weekly Journal. tha eee ortd Daner la New York, first an. peered. !7tS -Hurricane fa Havana eaaM grea.t deatroetlon "of Ufa and pro party. Itll Chief Tecumaeh. all ef tha Brltlah. died. Bora In 177S. IMS Buaiaeaa portion of Al-an. C fleet roved by fire. . 1 S -Ahraham -Uaeola eneMee Strren1 A. Ioug!aaa to a lolnt dhate. 1. a Marou'n -or uorne appointed gore ior-ree-1 of Ca r a H a. 1 1 1 I r. wimam ueae-esj eases- four quarts of water to eight of ap ples) and cook gently until tha apples ara aoft and clear. Strain the Juice and maaa tna jeny. mere anouid ta but three quarta of Juice from eight quarts Dies and four of water. Apples vary in the amount Of augar y and acid they contain. A-Jlne flavored acid apple anouid be used for Jelly. Apple, jelly may ba made at any time of J ear. tut winter applea make ths beat elly and are ready for use from now until January. When one wanta to make apple Jelly in tha spring add tha apple Juice. Crab appW Jelly la made In the same way. Thla ls Maria Parloa recipe for Jelly: Measure the lulce and nut it. In. a bra- aervlng kettle. For every pint of lulce add a pint of granulated sugar. Btlr until tha aucar la dlaaolved, then place over tha fire; watch closely and whan It boila up draw It back and skwn; do thla a second time and a third time: then pour Into hot glaaaes taken from a pan of water on the stove and set an a board. Place tha board near a eunnr window tn a room- where there la na dust It ls a great advantage te bava abeeta of glass te lay - oa top af tha glasses The Dally Men. BREAKFAST. Peaches, Cereal aad Cream. , fauearee with Cream Oravy, Hot Buttered 1nat. Ceffec. LUNCH bON. Cola VeaJ Loaf. Fruit Balaa. Hot Piarslt, Honey. Baked Cnatarda. Cookies. Tea. , DINNTCR. ( ' Clam Smip- Rim at Beef. Yotkehire Pudflna Rammer Squash.' Tomatoes with Mavoa Balsa. - Apple lm plina 'Gbsess. V Bkack Coffee