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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1908)
r WITOEMi EiGE OF WE cJOURNAIj THE JOURNAL AS 1 NEWSrAfta. c s. jack ron. 12.969,111, of which 1101.310 waalat the Idea or peaches, prune. I lu growth, and tbut would so far to the value of Alaska salmon alone, crap, applet, elc What' use badlelose the porta of oar Pacific states," and $410,117 represented the Tilno I either coyote or aleer for these frtp-lsayi the Oregon Ian. Yea, and might ".7.-..'rwiaar0' other ahlpmenta. The export to perlea and follies of life? - ' J actually dry up the raelfle ocean. southeast Alaska during August i ice, in mat mil cur, in mat i wruir .27 bere erstwhile the steer SAMPLES OF THE "FULL DINNER PAIL" im, irifc a ..a v.mhiu .i.u, or. i ferinr ..a 0 i t a .4 1 1. looked down in lofty contempt on I Jiepreseniaure Ellis made l ' ' I - - . . . These fiancee should set Portland the coyote, the prairie do and t&e "peeca, ana spote anout an auegeo. bualneaa men to thinkingand to Jackrabblt. there are well, re-read uemocratic panlo of 1857. Thla was acting, mere is a very inrno anuimo mures. i .. 1 f nrofitabla trada un north, and Beatt e This can he dunliented. substan-1 couia expect cms 10 get. oi course i in Pttul! Pictures of Destitution in Chtctrfo PortrsysJ by tie RspulL'csn ' Nswspspsre of That City Lctter"From tKe People Lattt-ra te The JiKjraal iboulS fca wrlttva M al.la af Ilia Ml-' unljr. suet .houia Ix ar. rliw. Tb will . b mwd Ctitrrr. at .the l ff1t at Furtlaat, Or., for frannanlaatua taraaifk anil M eeoosVUte mntr. - t 11 1 Kl'IIOSIt MAI TIT. HOME. A-euSt. All Hurlatiui r.rh,4 br tbaae silirni. ' jvii lh etrt tha Opart meat roe et. Kaat aid oiTlea, b U4; lUat S3S. , r'OHEKJ. AHVKBTI8INO HKr"atSICNTAT V8 Vr-nl.nil RrnjMntn Special AiJwttoln. Afroey. ..t llninavMi HnlMlna-. rtfia an-aoe. ; i. Xorki lKTt Ih'jra HulMlm. CUloaira. SmnTlpftoa TVrnia br "al1 or any aditr!. f II 111 Laiicd glair. vuaa or iiiikvi Or rtar J I On amotk. M . j "i NiAr. . . Om rar f 2.W I One aionfa I .23 . ' ; DAILY AND SD.NPAT. v - On Mtr IT.ftO Ooa KiDth.......l .08 (-hlMgn, CVt I rirtsan thouaand """l illiaro starving la Chlcaago aiirOnr t)ia rauaea, lack of miiluyiiiaat larants ajid (h conatant lnoraa til a ooai or llvlria haul a. r-ar mtm .11 i. . . ...inn v..f I m.ii. . - ..... iimU in fir. I the nanlo of 1 B 07 was of no con I a-1 rranonjlnt Inoreajaa in iit a,viv an, i viLcjt m uaiwMu I , n Buuu iuau - - iiia tha atajtllna aiinounflaniarit goes to San TranclBco and another gon. Washington and. Idaho. TholQuence. Ellla hadnt obaerred it, 'lmuU m th iajiy iawiPera of cm- aniall fraoMnn rliaf . nnmai to this I larkrafifclfa inrl eovnttta have had to I . - - "f..?"".:"11" rouslit Kloum a.nd rlty. Yet geograjh leal ly. by water, ro. In tbolr place hare com auch Portland 'is nractlcall? as near developments as .those w Alaska and British Columbia and Yakima Herald records Bering sea ports as Seattle. lis one to be heeded1. Big business hlch the North Fourth etreet The lesson at b betterf hiilMlnra will adorn I f, . .r.nUon lo ,h roaiiasars of the puuamga win aornit,pUbjloiMI nUon-J COn,miui in this reet ere long? Won t "'; They have ltn .reaohina proa. r""j auq nit -run ainnar pair. in 9 Jit, Circulaticn Guaxtmttt JAjj Crti6n tktt the ttmUtioa of U - obzooh JctrajrAi ''lit bars imditrd trniH ftnwtttJ by tit'' Alytrther'i CertiStd CireaUthu Blue Book Tta Piptr Aaj prorrd by lamtiftiHtm tAat the tirculattoa rcconi art fcrpt m'l rart mmd tbt cirrulmtioa tatraf with aaca mtmrmef tkit- atrtitcrl may nty om any ttrntrmntU or aaaar asaa or larpwwaiaars. amttr the ajmanaip oaf aMAuurrasrat im control Slaptambar S. lSOS. at arai rat J Multiply these August figures by 12, and consider what an enormous total of northers trade and travel flows into and out of Seattle., ft runs Into the millions in money, and the hundreds of thousands of people. Portland Ilea in a position to get a large portion of -that trade and BIU'AX OX WATERWAY'S. Small Change w ITTCrnTCV7CH WUHam la eject ed president, he will be in favor of improved and In creased Inland waterways. rflUfh tha rnnllniiam.a tr 111. n.i.nli- io power ana ma tnainiau- enoa or a nih larirr. Trra Knuuullcai. nawapapars or Ch loaf o without rirrp tlonha.va r'van thla Knpublloan claim tha Ho direct. In publUhlnr wltb bl nwiiaH ma report or trie apeoiai com mlttra appolnteil to lovaatlsala tha So they both say, and we "believe travel, already great, and constantly I they mean It. Mr. Taft made a very I reaianea. Ws still pradlct rain for October, a a IVetw of man who vote don't talk much, If pndltlons In publlo schools they show I that thousands of children ax suffer- A people"., not . psrty president U thS'r.WduM and oommerclaJ city or Chicago. llara ir that K .1 1 1 n ,nnnlni.m.c Not a Portland councilman has rati three columns of the naoer from tits .1 lri,nBn r t . . 1 1 . . 1 Chicago Inter-Ocean (Republican): growing. acceptable talk before , the Water- Fuiton Is still aaalnst the people bun HUNGER MENACES 10,000 PUPILS IN CITY SCHOOLS; MANY 1SEQ RKFU'tSIS TOt EAT, A few to far futile efforts have! ways convention Wednesday,' and Mr. they found Uiat out last spring, been made by the business men of Bryan "expressed-similar sentiments . Portland to eet into direct water- on the dnv follnWln. With his re- Lr.m i-m ii Vi th. n..-.nar.ra Startllns; Conditions In Chicago Shown route communication with these markable faculty, of stating a propo- l J'1- . . yniueertwSo rind 'S,tt.rv"atlon, northern ports; but because they sltlon. simply and clearly, Mr. Bryan I There's more money In prunes or al- hn fnr nn caiika or another failed, nnr Ilia ll u in mninaraHn. 1 moat anything else that grows out of . , . . .... , I, . . - ,, . . I toe ground for most of you fellowi It should not follow that no fur-ly few words, as follows: . .. . than In politics. trade Is very valuable.; Why should transportation.- God made the Mvera; boodle collections 1904T N6t on his Seattle and San Francisco have It all. man " the. railroads. The rivers life. He had rather face tigers, llona rgjIfOIMja l ami viitiiiaucB ui me matavxin til i Ai nia. e Has Many Victims. the Get but .the 'truth once nt- -Yf. tered, imd 'tla like .. A star new born 'that drops i - Into it place, . ; , And which,- once eircllns; on lta placid round v i Ket all the tumult,, tf the, ..' , V - earth can" shake. ; ; , " 1 Jamea Hussell Lowell.': , ion Trfl.r,t an inlnhltohl v a-pt a were the means . before t.. -v..- it Kw .in v,rri were, Invented and, while the railroad ii 6o nuo. o v.. ,v, jj ' . " - I i .... m i. k- i ..w I Trill - .1. .. d. . . I , , , l V, vav. I g.irw, ua nccu, . I. naa uui kiwi. ,u i h. j ,trr ai'raa u. Dn:tri.i ui c""uu- ""- the cheapness that ith river x give. reajury yorieiyou. aoout tnai cor- . Am ..nlTT- ...v. i ,.i.. ruPt1?n. 'und.y rtHed from h. .u,.u in. .... i i . larfRii ' in isiiar mn vnn wnnr mil TUB T1UUK Ui WUUli railroad; cannot . rivals the .watercourse aare not. . " T. . . n cheapness and then there la another v,ry pleaaant-that meeting In Chi- WHB Bnare into wnicn WOOl grow- aavaniage nni uie waiercourao naa. eBro of Drynn and Taft. Hather larg Iem liava been led hv the eraftv I wnen you rinian a river surnciontiy pleasant roiiowa, tnose. The country " " , : " " ' . ' dceo for commerce, or a canal UDon won t 8 to raclc and ruin whichever 'trusts, is laid bare by a Jour- aeiD or commerce, or a canaa upon Bm i,,", , ..w m tt I which boats can float, you make it pos-1 a (.000 HAVE? NO MEAL. IN MORNINO Body Asks Tnnd for Children. Some of Whom Have Forgotten Taate of Butter, Living on Dry Crusts Knrned by Ilnrolnm of Mothers Who Go to lied Fasting. 1 The Tribune heads its article: HUNGER STALKING IN CITY SCHOOLS of IN l .... rllr aaka thai II ba wtibbrld. lea juarual t aa.larali.o4 aa Intfuralns llie ! or lUKw.li of ourra.poidaata. UlUra ak..ul4 aa aiiu, tvUr . ...ii... irw, .... .... story telling of tha starving of the l't-J '7 "t,u' a mt umi aiwuUl la. tlS ones In the midst of Ttepubllcan I Corrt7-.Sts are B..tiri4 that Ult.ra . pruapvrtiy- wnn. ine xoiiowmg; wuma m u,.,in mmi tt (a i. "Five thousand children often go to ? 0 "aT- " Ua.it. school "breakfast l.aa. Fully . 11.000 ' A Comparison ,f Candidates, school children of Chicago arc under- m..i,i.iA t- . . . " fed and habitually hungry. Mothers go Ed,;;,: ' s "".' wow, s.-to the to bed In order that their children may JJ'J r n.l-IYom a view, have food In the- morning. Jlalf-elad i f -.f th. two snd crying children have been found on stat.. r -. rrBU,8n tlw United" h. ....... j.. . i . ... lotates It would seom that W. J. Drvan Is far the. most fertile minded. The . greatest Issues that concern the pao- . Pis of tha United States are. namalv. ' waaw VHUU4 Wa W1IU Mf aWCHUtlg IMH I .A..a.. m. - . . A ' ' agement commutes of the board of 11:1, ' T . ,h re0t 5r' education. " . Poratlona, guarantee of bank deposits. The Tribune tReoubllcan) sava: 1 r.Z.n'XiilJ J", If rep. .."Many wage earning mothers Incomes ot not more than SO cents ' - ' . I " . " '""ro eciuiiaoie aovern- "j . t i ififl.UK anu M Inn, ma ...... 1.1 1 i. Summarising the causes which nro I "yatem. These strong laauea are tha dues the conditions of hunger the same ' Th.y? f.2Yi J-2,r'"-. ... s paper cites 'lack of employment" and nents have to put up i, Th.t hySa tha "conatant Innraaaa In tha. Mt nflchaneed ao nint-h In th. U. i" " living without a corresponding Increase lJut1 thL '-t?l? t", F0Kresalvea " schist reason, for th. teejg , the streets busting dead fowls and rot ten fruit to eat. These are some of the statementa In the report on Indi gent chlldrea filed with the school man i: reaentatlvea and raUe It n dignity iu- hav, parlor to Its spu,k.r. These U.Jo, inta a Should prove great factora in ' f"rnteeln, i ,ore "equltabU govern- Among numerou. tn.Unce. the Trio- In publlo career should riot be raiaJT in une cites th- following: n hlsP tdeae Vnd sdvanced by his oa In Armour school district Father raeneesT "vancea . oy , his expe- ll not a scrap hta aarthlv ...r... mi. h. . . . louae;. five ehlldren. by hlfTli Ideals to achieve, or else Ve.ro-. and one garbed only greearon will be the unhappy fal ' ring for lread.- For Lryan uas the potential ovialltUM i of Five Thouaand Pupils Don't Know What a Full Mean Mean a and Ten Thousand Others Are Underfed, nal dispatch from Chicago. Un- You might get THE STALKIXQ HORSB I Si I K1 A 7ai a man aarlrk a amall no r t ft 1 i aer a siy reciprocity mat is reciprocal i , h- ..ii,0. mnu. it no., would show that Taft would carry Ore S."0 W tnJBtt 'DOr6 tban "! for men with large capital to act ft Jua? JlAt" KlU.itrwo izvi.vvv.vvu pounas oi ioreign wool, Where there is a river any man who be over 876,542. We'll gamble on that. mostly from Australia was imported I can build a boat can engage In trans The Record-Herald (Independent Re publican) heads Its story with: a straw vote that thoitsavTiH-ore. prrpTT.s SUFFER FROM HUNGER The Inter-Ocean begins the horrible-1 provided with free soup houses. I 1 - It. 1 . n,. An,AH .nJ It V. V...I1 J V.I- I CUK mio ims couuiry inpi year, ine im-uu ' " won their fight at every point with the ffl Eugene Guard: The lumbermen have railroada and everything pointa The Altcrta Country 1 a .v' .... .1 ' -.. ' .. " . th . uuu iu iijooout mo oiaima oi i connection witn it is toe ruiinir nnce .. r . r . presi I oi id cents ana.unaer mat Oregon fIna it-mw.h easler to re(fuate rate, build now. la good advice o ail ciaa.ei: W. P. Temple, a retired farmer of com- on Oregon SideliVntj nortarion is tne imreeHt in ' a irreat uunvi uwa ranroaaa and evervthlnir nolnta In a R. HEARST, la coming to Port- many years; and in moat aignif leant ru .h.ave U!5f, "u."be.r. i M wfd'oeTth'rnSf ft'r S'th" that ThJ rirt- hnl fi Tir win exPect 10 bulld toon t0.et buy before Umatilla county, hhs recently visited .V!' . '1 b.a.t. ..Ta!UJ?.LMm and tell. th. East Oregonlan dency. Mr, Hearst has a can-J wool growers received this season for , aiaato wno is ins proxy m much the Ithelr Clip. petition can be much more activ same aspect -mat mr. Tart is thJ; More significant still, and come-1 water tiian on land. .-'v., .t ... uiittg.iuaii'.uusui uu uib eyue " i uD juol ,i Tho La Grande commercUl club la caw u iub ubm 1, iu Brienes ana we 01 ,wooi growers io wnat w actually nowever, mat most or me getting actively busy, tllfe blood of xhe remnant of voters going on in the country, is the fact big railroad men Mr. Hill that ho i pleased to call the Inde- that the Wool trust receives these being perhaps the only notable pendence party Mr. Hearst's money wools In competition with the home exception are either openly or se- . pays the campaign 'erpensee.'- His product under most peculiar circum- cretly against this movement for money paid tho expenses tof .the. aa- stances. A duty is - paid on the deeper waterways, and every one of tional convention. His money sup- wool on arrival, but is paid back by them is against Bryan pnes ine campaign . literature, ana the government to the trust when provides newspaper support. His the goods manufactured from It are A WORD TO OREGOX BANKERS money affords subsistence for the ehipped out. spellbinding operations. In short, The scheme Is one of the slickest Mr. Hearst and . hla money are to tricks ; ever invented for enabling the Independence party "the". ,begin the 'trusts "Id hold up and "plunder, nmg, tne end ana, the whole show, I both the American wool grower, and D that he ha. been in Iowa, the Dakotaa, and eastern Oregon, when the country wa. new and that Alberta is far ahead of any of them .tate. a. a new coun try. Wheat yield, are remarkable, the productiveness of the soil and the fa duties for marketing crops are excel lent and land 1. increasing in value rapidly. "1 believe that Alberta will be the wheat granary of the entire world with in a lew years." said Mr. Temple neyer saw such universally heavy yieias or good wneat on new land. I helped thresh wtkiter wheat- last week which yielded all the way from 30 to Tha. hio-cr.. rsi, ..... k.i i. .... I no Dusneis per acre and I brought home ern uregon, say. The UaJles Chronicle. I ?'V.i Vi i nnu b.cx.r.c ii.i. naio kj u mi iiirm aim whfnh nmva h.vnn1 .... n...... I ..n . V . A r.iartv ll.l h....- T I .. ... ' . .. M-.o"V" out of work, mother alck or 1 ooa in ine nouse; tnree nair naked ai XraYlVZfVtafVLWnVZ. "":r . lhx .... QuaUtlee ef btW "jXaVr ."TKhW-- dUtrlct-On, io'n'.tJfnTf'e1 ?h'e V' mother-supports a family of four chll-lrlnl nf i.ti. t,ii.."Ti .V.."j ... new in .ui. iur ine nignesi' girt of the Deonle. 'In Drummond achool district Fam- Taft. on the other hand, quibble. In My of seven. No food In the . house, all of hla publlo utterance, he endeav Father out of work. Went to lake to or. to .how -the people weakne.se. In commltaulclile. but changed hi. mind the guarantee bank deposit iasue and and committed misdemeanor In order to In .11 of the Bryan policies generally, be locked up and get prison, meal. but be faU. to produce argument that "In Southwestern district Family of would convince any fair minded man of six found hungry, almost erased by lack their infirmities. of food. Had lived five day. on bread Taft ha. but little self-oonfldenc. he and water and U.t loaf had been eaten ha. alway. been an appointee, carry foS.vbrftkfa,t . ' . ... Ins- out the order, of hla .uperiors, and These are only a f ew of th many has not advanced beyond the point ot which the Tribune cite, out of the waiting for hla usual orders. He ha. thousand, reported. not develoned the hla-h am nrlrini Purine the present Republican Panic I atdf-rwllanr. that ha ahnnM hungry children have not even bean I be a great nation', leader. . CHARLIE) BARRETT. A Few of Boveridge's Blnnders. Portland. Oct. To tha Editor af The Journal I have never llataned to la speaker In mv life who mada aa man v I absurd and illogical statements a. did oenaior tfevenage in hi. address In Medford Is to have a a-anrral rloan. lng-up day October 12. Some of tha notorious AlAaka. vhp. t will be tried In Umatilla county. Holley. creditable Linn county. has held and successful fair. O THE BANKERS of Oregon realize that of all men, they ,k. J ln f nVin.VoJv i"?!?" fac.1 tnat Alberta Is a rich, productive hnld h nr,r,r,r. nf rh kllled a elk and a big and .excellent country." . 1 .- . . . . ' , i mr. -rempie own. over rour section. plan for guarantee of bank de- WnRihr .1 . '1 Ane wheat land tn Umatilla county without which there wouldbe.no In- the American consumer of woolen Posits? Can they not see that a roads as weft as good 'Street, say the wheat rasing dependence party. crisis of much moment to banking is Newa- io uuy inna, diii io vibh at Wlgn River Mr... Hearst's assumption for his 000 pounds of foreign wools enables at hand? Depositors are weary, very La Grande Is one of the Oregon cities wheat' biVsinesV and has pioneered party Is that It is cleansed and purl- the crafty ; trust to beat down the weary of the old, old story of col- lyandafeiv ?tTlDg and rowln:' ur- several wheat districts, his judgment is fled, idnhatKmocraticN and price of Oregoi Wool, while the 'duty laped banka. and lost savings. This M ' t k empKXthat Alberts betfenow Republican parties-, -are abandoned bald hack on exnorted' srooda enahlea weariness Is deep-seated, widespread. .. .fi".'". !l?..S1,?.CJtA.t? " Javed,,nex.t after only a few years of farmin. than and rotten $ carcasses of a former I the manufacturer to nay the freight and gathering strength. It is the Salem grow, says the statesman. glory. Yesterday, Mr. Hearst was in across the ocean and sell goods to secret stimulus and the fuel that fusion with the worst elements of foreign buyers at prices far below feeds the flame of agitation for pos- crXr'thE. H-ear"0 worSebUthin"evnere the Republican party as a candidate what the Oreeon consumer must Day tal savings banks. It is a movement notwithstanding the addition of several ror mayor oi wew xorK. xne day be- for them. The old saw of tricks In mat. will refuse to he satisfied, tnat for that he was elected as a Demo- all trades, the wiles of the green cannot be controlled, and that is as - gaiem statesman: work n cratic candidate to congress by the goods, man, and the smoothest certain as the grave, to eventuate, ?la"fvs-8a'G 1? .lawPth0,Rr?hlng with a hvV votes of, Tammany. The day after scheme of the gold brick artist are either in a national law for guaran- miiesy' of Salem Ae eaTt cSmp ""of bik loam a ui nuyuuncau tusiun ne was nar- nut to thn hlush hv thla trren.tnt tee Ot aeDOSltS, or in a system OI I ".'? e"uei 'a i me water xanK . x . . . . . " -I . . - , - . i slue nessea to inaries Murpny. leader or bunco eame of the aire the Amer Tammany, as candidate for governor j iCan tariff as manipulated by and ot abw lors. ine aay Derorean I f0r the American trusts. these lightning changes, he was a postal sayings banks. Do Oregon bankers realize what it of Kola. La Grand Observer: would mean for the government to This meant a revenue of M,600. Last eitner Iowa, the Dakotaa or Mitum Oregon In the same stage of settlement una aeveiopment. In the country east of Calgary in the Bow river valley where the chlnook wind breaks up the winter two or three nmes irom uecemoer to February cat tle Winter out on the runra without foH th an1 be , "hipped off the range every iinmm in mo year, xne iana is covered crop of trra ss. Is a rich and can be farmed ev-erv this . .... mr. x eiuuifl ronnn lmnti inf.r..,in. in value verv ranldlv onri mh.a t Thirty thousand was ought for JS and J8 per acre four .candidate for the Democratic nom ination ior tne presidency, A more variegated and, picturesque career has seldom been achieved In politics In so brief a period. He has fiddled on every string in the political gamut, and when each string refused longer to wheeze under his bow,, he started a party of his own. makes his party Interesting is that, THE PRESENT; NOW; 1908. H ERE is a brilliant remark by a years ago Is now worth all the way v' lu w. according to location. The Canadian Pacific railroad is bringing In hundreds of settlers and land Is selling rapidly all over the country. Bonaflde farmers are taking possession of the country and Mr. Tem- after all hla manv comnrnmutno-on. ance- They dD wan to face the didacies. Mr. Hearst is its Moses, and Bryan of today 1908i the7 we no virtue Its slogan. If both old parties wlllln t0 and discuss the lssutes are rotten and Mr. Hearst redeemed, of thla 1908; but ther a11 eU what wondrous changes a day hath you what? Tha Bryan was Tor wrought, that one day since he was "free snTer" in 1896. In sweet embrace with both. AB,t them about any one of the Mr. Hearst's candidate is a Btalk- 19 "Roosevelt policies" tnrned down go Into the banking business in com- season the admissions were 24,000. Pen- x,xi riv .v. . T, xt dleton has demonstrated that a fair, petition with them? Do they com- and a successful one, can be held right prehend.what it would mean for 1SL- 'n town. 000 postal savings Institutions to bis Tt is riiv'.,rnri.in, .. ..it hk... pie looks for that m,i trv. ... 'nnwiA. nron th v.,,ii, BQt UP ln the eOuntry, ramifying In I; upward, ay. fiie Albany 80Ud wheat field within a few years. Republican organ, the LouiS-1 ' . Herald. On every hand new house, are Good land can be bought yet within going up business building, and real- reasonable distance of the railroad for aenue property. .rainier. are busy, eie per acr.e. Tne Canadian plumbers are busy, carpenter, are busy, Pacific has recently opened up 3,000,000 merchants are busy, the council 1. busy, cIM,.wn,c5 JJ.,a elIlnS to settlers at thecommerolal club- is busy, the public l and u Pr acre on eight years' nuiaiy ! uuj, everyooay is ousy, m-1 v . . r inieresi, and nun- aid ana Democrat. I "reus ot nrai-ciass rarmers are settling on inai rracr. ' t one big, compact system in every vIIIa Prist ''Wtt nAori TiAt fiAolr for the real Bryan amid the citl vi'a.ge af ham,le,tT dust and turmoil of the present cam- " Th ""U"D T TiJ"a. I I lis tttA rl ntr fViA A-AiroMnvmrint Antannrl What p , I the field, would be withdrawn from ims is reaiiy a Keynote - utter- ,, , 0,it I VVU1U1V1 aACaVA, tUUaD( UUU W UV't'UQl I.VU I In the postal system? Let Oregon bankers reflect, and let them reflect gravely on the sit uation, a situation that is not theory, but a fixed condition. change is going to come, -and we shall have either guarantee of bank riannafta nr rtnatfll .qflvHritra rkftnlra - . . u ik. v. v, xV I - , .--0- ing norae. - tie is a aecoy to dupe "v"" 1, uu t,u perhap8 Doth. If th'ey would save to the unsuspecting. He is hopeless of Republican convention. Can you get themselves millions upon millions of carrying a county m tne country, and "u ai"'CT' " """ -" ftr rtAnositji insteari of onnoslnir Incapable of reforming- anything. waa tOT 're silver in 18961 That Is they Bhould De eager supporters of a me ciaim mat Mr. Hearst has mo- luo answer vnai. 11 as oeen maae 6afe and gane guarantee system. The nopollsed all civlo virtue and tucked uring this campaign to the ques- handwriting is on the wall, and the it away under hla arm, is the most Uona ' Today except that Thomas bankers are short sighted It they iantastio jest or tne century. Mr. I Jeiieraon was a rascai, a sneaa, a cannot see It Hearst played the political game for coward and a traitor. too high stakes, played by the wrong e don t blame tne orrice-noldlng The Methodist brethren are still method and is about Played out. His and office-seeking brethren. What I fighting Cannon. But can't they Bee present enterprise .is not the lofty can tney dor iney don t aare to dis- that Cannon Is merely a representa one of hoping to win, but desire to cuss present, pressing, Interesting, tive of a type? Why fight Cannon, beat somebody. ' important things; they must Aol.nA TOte for Crane. Burrows. Cul- somethlng BO " they gabble abont I Inm Parkins. Honklna. Elkins n mis flwuniuw amaue with free surer m iss and tne Virginia ij8t as lonn as a Harriman railroad? SEATTLE resolutions of 1798. DO they believe Tho 11 rnn tntrether: act in unison. the voters can be misled by such .... k niSTJI eVI anaarna a a Iraa. AV j. V w . 1 . ... " I " C1 , f,7 ,"ta1'ia l"e fa- twaddler they have assumed to be and to a the commercial business by water- routes' of Seattle, should beof interest to Portland business men. - The total arrivals of vessels at Seattle for August were 95, all steam vessels but two. and their ton- A TRANSFOR3UTIOX very large practical extent have been the Republican party of this nation. Now what are you good Methodist fHE Takima Herald says that a brethren going to do about -li the iruu cannery in mat city has I rest of these ondeairabie statesmen, packed this season more tbaa -very whit as bad as Cannon? Why one mousana ions or mixedlnnt at 1-aat temnru-arllr knock ont nape waa 189.134. The departures Irrigated fruits. It is estimated that the whole gang, and be done with It? of vessels were 90. tonnage 160.477. the cannery will be in operation for whr -fight" Cannon, and vote for his TV . tram Ka.e nasannrada a. aM.ta.t I - a j . a . I 0 . The number of passengers arriving at Seattle for August by water .were: Krora Coastwise porta, 2,412 ; from southeast Alaska ports, 20186; from Bering: sea ports, 678; from for-' risn porta, 668; from local porta. :o.OS6 The outbound passengers, fa abowt the irr.e proportioa, numbered 108. 178. whoia 3,127 west toAlaska i-orts. 73 to Perlrjg sea ports, and t.rsrly 26,400 tiPrltlh. Colombia I "." . ' . - ' - ' T rrrl aeiiie retelved by water ' la Asgcrt amounted te at least two months more, and. when closed for the winter, will hare com pleted the pack of ' 1,000 tons of peaches. 300 tons of apples. 250 tons of pears and large quantities of plums, prune and apricots. The cannery gives employment to 300 men, women and children and bas a pay roll cf $1400 to l,od a week. This la going some. Twenty-five years ar that region was almost a desert. The eorot bowled at the grating ter, who If the SBbJert'fcad been mentioned to him, wovid have; pawed and bellowed la sovtse aeornl understudy and . sycopantlo tool. Sherman, for vice-preaJdent, possibly for president? Running Snots Written for The Journal by Fred Denton. Th. gag that Bryan Is the chosen Portland a few evenings ago. Take, for candidate of the Standard Oil" crowd ln .."il-. 0,lowlBf : . .in kii. i. Th" orator can not be a statesman; will not go down the publlo throat in he ha. no time. The organiser of busl- vlew of the cash' put up by it with neas can not bo a statesman; he ha. Foraker. How many of the Standard no1iie".',' . .... t . OH -malefactors of great wealth' are erldge himself. It I. not true of many in jail as a result of anything that of the world's greatest orators. Mr. Roosevelt or Taft and their associates Beveridge ha. the reputation of being have done? Bryan mean, jail Taft an orator, but the Lord know, he la no mean, uncollected fines, for that hunch, statesman, so that hi. remark 1. true so iar aa ne is concerned himself. But It Unless some more bridge, are bulltl;. not true or Henry Clay, who was pretty soon, the east side will be de- P"" "n orato' n? statesman, it is pendent on the Albina ferry for trans- w0'D?;n!eJ Webster. It I. not nortatlon tr.ue ot w- E- Gladstone. It is not true v a of James G. Blaine. It is not true of Some men who have held down , fat 4&?,,f.riat,Sarl T0 Chatham and his son. Jobs by the appointment of powerful w"1Jam f' I to not true of Edmund friends have .never "done'' anything but h.i.JLl8. n1 I?a of Beaconsfleld the public. and hundred., of others that I ' might v a . name. And I verily believe that It Is To start out to estimate the chance. no !rU8 of W- J. Bryan. Again he said: nt Tirnn ..iin(..i. .n. ..... .,..1 II was oniv 10 vears asro Rrvan nH. another except Texaa and Arkansas. 1. J00?1" r? ""y61 an h had euc- one of the amusements of the old lady ewed at that time and Introduced that In the tower that write., umlcslred ao f,yftem . th8; . country would have, been companiments to the morning dis- ""vlf?".. , , . . patche.. - And u is only abotit 10 years ago that CAma nii. V- nine arllfn-ti la. r.-- 1 dOCtrllltt. And AV61. Sifter hftl Fl Wf wviaT) vui v j turn? ouiiui a in cauu I ., , , . , ; . . are saying that if Bryan gets ln. some on thesirlgle gold standard he sent a proposed railroad, sawmill or brick- commission to England endeavoring to yard will not be built. The town that Persuade that country to adopt biroet- pulls together and offers other Induce- t 1 , o Benator Beveridge must ac ments than high price, for factory site, knowledge that Mr. Bryan Is not the will go ahead In Oregon, Bryan or Taft. I?nl3fkman who wul,l hav brought ruin ..w vvuuuj uy. m tuiuuiuri ot iree .HlrA. A r. I V. . ...U. The trawin la the product ofi land r TnVinV7h. V... . : . monopoly, careless charity and brutal. kii:"b lTi.yr".r5.1"? Indifferent and nearslghtwd laws. Prei K"t -..ir.!.. 'f tramp and poverty question ln Oregon. An idle man. rich or poor, is a burden on society. , on eluding the Herald A man llvlnar In Pennavlvanla. wrlt.a for a copy of the Tribune. He is think- Amputating the List. i?5?I?m.,n.I.ureFon- mi name. i. From the Weston Ta-!.. vjujuergmi. A? h pecome. a citisen it will be llk In.in. .-TZZiL'' . or uregon we'll bet he make, a sue- Din- 0ff an h. .v.Tv,xi r .f' rum n him n..tn tanti.tn. t(k.,. P"s, . i ear. put nevertheless the If one letter ln hi.' name w cbieS wUh a number of cJd anTtli P"t Don't bother him much in getting hfs. we would suppose he was comlna- out -Vwha!:. 7hfl. . ld and..valu.ed ub- Doctors may p aster him here to run for the legislature or for iv. ?in ...i..,f. .pJxtwno Pay I Doctors may pm mm. consrress. I .o-ijr. ana Harrlman's Ixame Back. Note E. H. Harriman has rheuma tism of the muscles of the back. Geo whisl No wonder he has rheumatlz. By the jumping. Jehoshaphat! Underneath a load like that Ed bas been toting around for years Most men would pe sireicnea out their biers: Nor corsets of steel Nor belts and braces Would be equal to putting them iiacK in tneir places. But Ed, - He just goes ahead. Limping a little, perhaps, some days, Picking around ,for easier ways, And when he sees A railroad or two and things like these He gobble, them up and hikes along, Singing-the same old harvest song, "I gather them In. I a-ather them in. " -;.' Ed's back always ha. room for another track, ' And a little thing Ilka the rheumatli season I But doctor, can't master him. mm. ?e,l .b"..do. BO' .Py 'n advance and Till thev can kill Albany Herald: Forced to walk th .r Vn.Xi Vh. a. . reason tor doing Oh. Ed Is a wonder, uwu i o'clock cif wUertr dl-.js1: a man and wife and two small children JS, right- from our. vrr.PTtMMS L0011".? finally found shelter Saturday mom in I ill .r.om V.r"' wron?- We can With rheumatlx ano a place to sleep In a private reel- 2S0 a vear fnr la .ii A. " nil ' r. v i . a io yoa-r ior id years, or an inm. Na haan't rrt tiresome trio from La.fa-ratta. iran I -.aIssru?i We Intend to Anything like that? they found the hotel, full and "wlthno lub.crlber on . 8cat p ace io ro wanaered tne street, all start anew. Aa . mattai in searcn or rooms. .,, Kn ...WrtE. i... V,'":.':': night in W. J. Lampton. How Roosevelt Roles. in advance, and enoua-h mnr, ar. ..... I t tail ma Km 'nu DnutMlt mU mo xaiica vaii uuiud. ill.. Tun ui icbuuuu Li. in. 1 1 1 i ii'.a man r n . . 1. 1 i in,.,ii,u m w ii.ria a.n uiiixua x 1 1 j 1 1 1, miu a Diwuii muiTiauai wtw iu rauner our new System a this morn Ins- when asked about tha I rratifvlnr snoceaa. Wa want in v.. ui u wu ouiia. x u mJVmr luriuuB-icu-1 111 luiura liiail a SUDSCrloer want. ers who are located ln a tent west of I the naner It's onlv a amaii onn.r. Ounning. blacksmith shepi are a eurl-1 weekly, anyway, and quite humble and. Forbids me to disclose oslty to the Indiana in the city, who I modest If a patron doesn't want i7. Rnw Rnnnv.lt ml. hut T have heard vox. iiui. uiiui b Liuiu wuavv iuri TeiiDWl paper uaui j cnougn io pay ror it In haired Indian, those are who look at advance, we are perforce compelled to calms and by card, can tell what will I part with him. By the first of Novem- "Since e are eighty millions strong - Ana ne is only oner "Sty boy." 1 aaid, "the sham. I feel 'XI. thu. that Teddy goes: 'Aatnnlahln. aA anmonlahlnar ber the Leader will not have a single Objecting, correcting, dissecting, delinquent subscriber on Its books, and I Upbraiding, parading, degrading. " ,w'11 "aaaa wnn aa clean and I tiarunr, asserting. suDvertmg. befall you in the future. a l.lnHin' linn, with .T1 i- V. I northwest we are waiting with eager j "atlafactory a subscription lint a. any j Abroaching, reproaching, encroaching. ope io see tne expansion or tne lum-1 .f,' c vncawn. xob eaiior iwpaunj, imoaun(t anu oianii, ber trade after the fifteenth of this wUl po.ltlvely know when he Produce. Exploding, corroding tnd goading. been won by month, when the 40 cent rate that ha. If P on ' reliable Washington 1 Denouncing and trouncing and bouncing, the lumbermen goes lntoUi" K'Zlr ..i a11111 paid ror I ouppianung ana ranung ana ranting. ra hundrada of mllla raadv to raanond I fined prejudlc in favor of gettina; nald I Romancing and dancln and pranc 9 the call. If there t. any department I ' .verrthlng h doe. ln the line of I Prejudging and smudging and grudging. r commerce tnat need, a Bunch It Is I that of lumber; It ha. been paralysed long enough, and ajjy acces. will be hailed with joy all over th.. field. Registration days are slipping by. The last thance to register is nearly here. It is the duty of every citlien, no matter what his political views. to vote oa election day. Register now. . . i The Bryan poller would abandon ear Islands ta the racific. the orrt- posts cf that commerce, the base sad the station and eipectatloss of ffect on the Northern Paolflo there 1 1; f:0.. . . ow na WJ de- IMrtdlng and TJhldlng, ud striding. :mg ana oancine- ana prancing, of commarra that naada a hunrih.lt la I su Description., aavertlslng or Jot work. 1 Outreaohin and teaching and preaching. a no nrrinr ana surging ana soourging. Portland's Dflemma. I And .pangllng and mangling and wrang- From th. Weston Trader I iai t.i-. .a ... There are law. and laws law. that I And atina-lna- and swinalna-and fllnsinar. - aon rnaanaf auKj laaninsj. and shouting and clou tine. -ad by a double I law that I. Inr. . ' a '-I ? .' 1 . ' 1 . J. " . 1 tv.. . trailing a bnssr. a ramllr affair. I by a majority of th. peODle reaUlr haa ir that im ma, son. muiiotis strong la of Albany Democrat: rht was a ona-riorae Democrat wax on oow attached, followed by a bnesv. a fam was tha rig of a farmer moving from Marion county to Lao county, lie bad old hi farm near Salem and was moving to one he had bought frve mile, beyond Janction. Moat of bis thing, had bee shlrped bv rail, causing a kirk at a rate of 4 cents; what he oouin Ming taKn cy wagon road. A First street I cas be enforced and laws that cannot I And amashlna- a ZJZ'JZtSlZl ".". a trit.bu.t true wylng that publlo And autlngVr FL'.l0,-wJ.l,5l?p,n'(ln .n,.uat ."f11 T towV A Annihllatmar. de aw .ai m jnooraea ana .upported And natura-fak. by a majority of th. people reaUiy has I no rjroner rlara an th. w. i. t him. . t .... Publlo opinion Is oerwhelmlngly barkf Exclaimed ny lltU. m of the prohibition law In Umatilla "I ra glad were eighty coonty. Publlo opinion Is back of tha And be I. only on. Why Tailors Thrive, From the Ft, Lost.' Fapcbllc What I. mo rldlcnliw. r-bysirauUy a. . mod-ra nvan7 (trtreteara. aatomo biiaa, elrrr.tcra and railroads have Hrivad hla lege, lack of exerclae haa shrunk his arm a. fiDokine- and fnl air hira flattariMl his ehst. ) aed.ntarv wrrk and irian.i have rounded h'. l,ow!dr-ra: vbi aa 1't grt-iTralv fat la rtd-n;ttiaiv this; be Is Dorcine cr a sticy of oaseiogr. Punday closing of aaloona In Portland Saloon, are In a claas by thrmselvea from other line, of business. The fact! lnfr"r required to pay license show, that tbey are recognucd aa harm-1 iui. ibi i wny oy common consent Sunday closing of aaloona arpllf. in I i wujdh ana oin-r line, or business are! nWl U1UIC. 1 AOV MBIM an AV.r. salou. dlatrlrt attornar. r.r,. lamwm. ii i -Tin tana, ana sors nw invwi to eniorce tn M. ChrUtie. lo New Tork World.' Hrmstoa Rejoices. . From the Houston Pest. On this aretath-. .theraai. elyslan. rrhanoua xhila:-stlni eculnocttai Sabbath morning, when the Lord and all hJa rad'.dnt angels are with a la heavenly Houston th. City -f Aa- fhatlthems It Is a nriailr ani-Hm thot rht law anlfi.1 I that Wfli Itva 4a a Ik hi arh.a a.afftimM all lines of twjlna affected. Of toerae I spraad. tipoa the rrava r.f our rJ'mrl i there'. armethlng hark af this vt-tttove I departed tumititf a waa I th f f lovers rraoluttoa of afr lmtmn It ? r.. il.n . .r r ... . . Mt.. ...... a n-rulre a inaanlf'ylrg (iaaa te prt thajof the J! laee that carpet the torrh tall ef the hl.krr r-raa-nti K.W i rA iiul.r . twmv a4 ..- . 4 woodpile. I . ' miM ai !) (nht i Ua. I retveal T (ititriV that Y,a DAmir.HnHH t...t. passed tha railroad rate law. President Roosevelt would never have put that law on the statute boolcs Were it not for Democratio aid. The Republicans fought mu president b pel measure ana would have defeated it only that the Demo crats threw asJde their partisanship and stood by the president's measure for tha country's good. Every one knows this, and everybody will remember how Roosevelt called upon TlUman, the Dem ocrat, to champion the bill In the sen ate. And although that gentleman had no love for. the president, for Roosevelt "ce grossly insulted him, yet he took " ana uia more man any liv ing man to make it the law of the land. ORO FINO. Taft Issued Order. Salem. Or., Oct 9. To the Editor of JiJS. JOU rkrA,10 undersigned, ex soldlers In the Philippines, in reply to a -statement made by Patrick Bruin's xAieiiua in ma uregonian or October 2, wish to state to the public, that the statement made by them that Mr. Taft never issued any order forbidding; the soldiers from using the Luneta as a place of rest from the Intense heat, -ta utterly false and without foundation, for we were both there at the time the order was Issued by .Mr. Taft and know to be sure that he did enforce the order. J. M. KELLY, j. 7 HAYS W. W. Irwin, witness to signatures. Henry Wade Roger's Birthday. Henrv Wade Rnnra it... . .... Yale law .chool, was born ln Holland Patent. N. Y.. on Octohar in net ti. received his education at th. University ?f Mfchlgan. from which h. graduated In .1874 and received tha na.v.. r A. M. and LL. L from Wesleyan uni versity. In June, 187, at Pennington. N. J.. he married Miss Emma Ferden Winner. In the following . h. . . admitted to tha bar. After ha h. practiced for several years he was made professor of law lo the law school of the University of Michlran in " Ti From ItSS to 1S0 he was dean of the law school. In 1890 he was appointed president of th. Northwestern univers ity Vu.n.lAM Til K,.W i . , . held until 1S01, whence became profes sor of law at the Yale law aihi tha dean of which he became on Januarr 1, 104. H. wa. chairman of the world's congress of jurisprudence and law re form. Which was held at Chlrairo. In 1581 an4 ha. held several other posi tion, of honor. He ha. also written a number of book, on aublerta af ln.l.. prudence. This Date In History. H1J Chamrlsln gave battle to tha Ircxiuols In western New York 111 The Rev. John Cotton waa ap pointed, pastor of the First church io Boston. 1 7 Benjamin West, the great merles n painter. was bom. EHsd March It. Ul. 171. Major Desberrea. the first lieu tenant-governor of Cape Breton, retired lmm - orriDe. lilt Tha United States naval scad emr wa. formally opened. 1147 Jerome Bonn parte returned to Frei'" after an exile of tt year. 1M1 Dr. Frtdtjof Sna, (he Arctic explorer, bnrn rear Christiana. lttCm faderate caralry ondcr Oeti. era! ptoart entered Chmierabur. Pa. 111 William H. t aj-4. Aanertflaa stateaTTvtvn. ttltxt B"ra Mar It. 1ML llard Work. - Fl Uin the WssMa-toti Htsr. -Tea." said Duet In Flax, "I hav see. reo 1 t" lif. and by the hr-Jet klsd of work." ' Tn d-l't rok a f ynn -ad t-ltrj prot-al t pa n -- with hM rT "" Xif rar tvtrt. I aire! U tior.a.-