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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1908)
EDITOR Ml QPTQE cJOUENMj A I HK If IT I W lf A T ,iae,t prohlbtUenlit. The year be-ltrioui men Hat proved that they! The espioslon, or Internal, combos-1 rortiand. if red Jliht womso for- wbeo registration closes. J VXA ' with three states wholly prohl- can ralso fairly rood grope oa' tneseltlon engine, using cat, la the answer. I bidden bare, go thr to reside. It I Clerk Fields and bis deputies Random SKota County J rill AH IMDKPgNDgNT KIWIPaPFB- ) I bltlon. and nn fh.. fhr A r. I elevated dry. nnn.lprlnliU lanit. lulu far fir. I thla t.avtnttna nf I la not nruilnii ........... t-- I d . ....Il a I V " ..w . w w. V v. V, . I " " ...an...... ...... M W Mfl V... . . . V .. v. . " -wwaa u. . V U U I UK ' II L I TUB IILTI UiCl B .. U 111 W W .- 1 I na-MMwH.- I - ' - I . ' I - I . ... ... ' I ' m - I - - , W flPA ItnA c a JAcaaow , rubiM oy a majority of 12,000 pass- any average season. Tbe paat anm-l thla new type of steamer angina la a liana. If red light women, denied pur I eery evening, a convenience that! This la a great time for stock spcu- iiu (mo 100 roia recently, wnere bui mr was an unuauauy nam ona on tecnnicai periodical: ibbh pi meir caning here.-go alas-1 wlll make It a simple matter for ? poa.pone r operations, ..; . a. . n!7 fc.iM- MOO.000 people of the country lived those people, and yet we read of The apparatus oon.l.t. of a eompara- for the denial la by tba law, busy men to get their names on the in. cool effrontery of this "nwiw Ht. mtik Yt,iii if.u. yortued. or. a ,jry territory, there are now 38,- many pretty good yields up thera tiveiy anal coal distilling chamber, a and tba law la sovereign. The pret- books. ' . mut 10 tha fm 0f tb itina ;'; , Kntm . a p-ufrtc t forii... or. for 000.000. Almost one half the peo- up to SB bushels an acre of wheat, aombbar to waah eut tba tar and oaie- ent movement against tha women U ' ' In thi Watory'or' B,a,rtvlMiiUJat p'r ' S::?,-' Uru "ito M pie of the nation are residents of the and larger crops of barley. Eren al- t"o eonatituanu. and a drl.r In not Tha Joornal'a. bnL bow that it la 'Juat' treat ma and mv aorern- a 9 a a TEIGPHONRS-MAII TITS. IIOMW, AnBt. All apnraia rrkd br ttt aaatwra. Trll (br oparitnr tha depart nl jam ot, , FaM Sid afflra. B 1444; ICaat . rPRKION ADVIHTiaiNO RKIHCSBNTATlTa Vr-otiixt Rmjamta Srll AlmTtMa ArT. arid sonea with counties everywhere falfa Is successfully grown on muchwh,0,, a relieved ef aioaatOD ft ja goo cltlienshln and eom-lment aaya King Peter of 8ervla to L 'ht baa produced tha nreaent bual ! almost tumbling over each other' In of this land, and this enables the mo,Vu? bL ",B threush layraof moa enM to t h . . t .warfwherfc S?Vopu the ecamper to get In out of the wet. farmer gradually to engage in rala- ,,. . .-'r!! .hk air beneflt th,t possible for Portland throughout the world tha people are ; '"W that panics and The tide la so pronounced and ao ap- Ing diversified crops. !" 'J JL LLIi Portland'a aoclal life. going to take a larger hand in gov- a if.DSbi& .7" K,.?"., C0UPn.,rd: parently Irresistible, that observers There Is some evidence to show I tha akhauaL &rtar tha aiDiaaion haa I , j I eminent, and trust lesa to the kave now a protective tariff, a oii a. ..L b.HM.I - nM .-la. - - hlaa I ABiaiL - a I A H..1 1A I. iV.4 I i A a a. 1 at I . - - - I . . . v I ( U II IU H A 1 1 1 1 It 1 1 tt rtaaai I A A tt A H UrtTi-li K 'Mil: :S;7i k ' . . Br! PralcunR In""-"r " .lnc:e"nl "'u"uoa oelUworlitarllBtbeelBs.may TA1-T AND BRYAN ON CHINESE Fetera. . publican' aan.t; and ico.rir.a-. with old y 11 1 1 11 .. 1 bui uianer 01 a tew years uum ao-iaua ibuu iuruu(Qoui a couaiaeraoia 1 aim oe 01 use. ine enure piani la ai-i tkXCLl 6I0N I ' 1. ihTL'niiLa Til! 'canadi TaTairitca . I IOOn, w,u D swept entiroly from area mauce an increased preclplta-l moai automatio in operation, once it la OAILT. One fMf.. Oe rrr., the rural dlatrlcts, and be confined tlon. The more of such lands that I olna'- No tMn of boiiera or - Oaa rr, DAILY AND SDNOAX., IT.MIOd aimtk. I .SB I .....ia.ooioaa awath jo j wholly to the large cities. The Wg are cultivated, the more rain will st'NDAT. . I liquor men of the country are almost fall: the more the aoll. not to be de- . ..II.SO I One'aMnth I JSI readv-to eonfRa aa mnrh. and nr I enfoa waa rhnn.hr will vtoi m . 1 .yi.vu 1. h. buwuBjUb, . . j iviu u . strenuous In their appeals to retail valuable crops. But this soil moat liquor dealers to elevate the tone of be worked right, and made to hold their placea and reform their bust- and conserve such moisture as Is ness methods in the hope of arrest- available for the growing crops, to lng the relentless and expanding cru- o-et the best results, and this is be- sade. The retailers are called upon jng done. A good deal along this to cease violating the laws, to atop nne has been learned during the past Jan Crt(t that the cimUOo of tit, OSXCKOBT JCtrmHA! Adnrtitett Crti6e4 CimUtht Wu Root Joa Cunnon thrown In and atlll a panic. More power to Councilman Cottel, ditioniT fot"'"0?-..0' '".ffZ1: N AN argument la favor of a morel In bis efforts to curb the rapacity of tbintra any bettor than they are nowr liberal law, or administration, the plumbera' trust. He la on the . , , respecting Chinese. Immigration, right track here, as he also Is In his of Wif bJewaryKf B.mna? Mr. Taft aald. In June, 105. that I opposition to combines of restau- ham, .waah., hi company la ahippina l5? 47.1 of that atate went Into eireot. If thla ba a fant. avarv ulnon. that-we may for the time lose the Connecticut, It Is aald. being very "L-hlf -nouia pecome a -rank approval of certain unmaannahi- "conservative," is safe foy Taft. It e a a iy ouiu . , . j Lincoln Stefflns opinion that T.n 'T"t,pr. Koch urrea teaohera , except . '"TTJ:. "7- rn.ott ... th. moat rorrnnl " ?"LucIln.e. watching of water and of presaur ara required. Without going Into further details, l tm Ik.t - .a.I 'vTto p not b- ?-n 'ant. and aaloona, w,v rh.r r-, ... kiif " -. "vum wj are airaia tons of coal will do under a boiler. Coal will very likely be nearly ellm few years, and more will be learned. ,?,,r 'B.!? ! . ! a mui member" of W nd of the ex v . w-wlu constantly grow in use lna mul- ,. . .v already intoxicated, and to chasten bv atudv and eTnerl mentation. In the their establishments' into places Of veara to mm. Th farmer nf tndiT the best possible respectability. nead- to h an intelligent tudnt! he They are warned that tha reform of must use his brains as well as his tltude of ways. fornta and other coast states." H I Connecticut was the most corrupt saniury measuree and prWuUona to u iwan in comoaunir cuberculoala. A much nobler and mora nMMiunf wn.lr than conaumlna an mnh fim. in MMit- An eloctrlo line from Oregon City I tng them athietica. , , Inated as a source of power as it is converted, with Increasing ,..,...,.. ... " 1 . : r.. ..ninn nnmw Into and lrl.lr I am ut H TM 109 quty Ql CCUtlve to disregard tha nnrMaonahla ' 1. . .. .. . B demands of a part of the community 10 Moiana is me latest one proposed. One could fill column. In merely " tMV a 1W Uiu o V a V . nvaavsa in the far west, and 7 ftptr Aaa mrortd br mmuratn CJUt (JW cirrmUuom ncordt art kepi with Kara asrf (A mia(Mia atatrtf witi nek matwnty laat mdrtrtitrt may refy cm ajiy scawaMUor aaawawm w lowpaonwarn LCV'm"ro' September s, 1908. OuV To be a "good. fellow" serious thing. Dean Reed, Is a ... . . " WUBfc UOO U1B UIAIUB HO "Oil no UIO I AW. a a t AW I- llf 1a I a-vt -aavA 411010 the r business may be too late, but hand8 ftnd tne farmer, of both Ea3t. U"1-- JuBtIcs and courte9y iuat m ana wrougn K es me oniy ern and We8tern Oregon are nope oi Biemming me uae or pro- thia aa never before, nioiuve munaation mat, at this mo- year8 we Bnan gee ment, seem, to foreshadow eventual Ltantly increasing BiieriUiaoUOB. . I rn11lnl, An-atn tn thin aoannrt fr.nl tha I The movement Is without parallel v-at ,,- nf rnfrft, oretrnn tne "un or precedent, in American Ufa, and rt t,.. h..n tr,.i-, .aid rhot n,- i I in its contemplation, the observer but one crop of land Tne land hM tub AKU,BtHUt auuli thlnk8 they are "unreasonable" and insist on extend, ve Oper of a great and very resource- o'j money f or bribery and other . 1m insisc on exiena- . , ; . - PfPe purpoar-a In electlona, and to en- tesy to a people I ful Country able the law offlcera of the Vovernment ubllo to determine whether the I -I .v-v... . ihnitl w. mr-- .1-1 J 1 ":' V a I and tha onllirht.nTn.il nf hiimanftv I :. T - I ti ni i-I ooniriDUllona maae Wera nronarlv n. . Within a few :?ZZ Z :VT--i-ir .I '"V t0 dT cn immense bene-1 -lu""' ",UI1".'" endedfor lentimata piirpbaea.- . - .ro.t and 1 14 Dulu,uuu ' icTinfc lum ii i f ennsf ivania. iois.ib appropriate, i jr. ryaa aiaputea thla. Ha aaya: vaofumae oflr JV.eiL': These remark, seem to indicate ?-nbl-speeches wUl .carce.y lose Ju gnj&j IUM Bkav tw. laiw uiu iiiuiui;.' i vina cyma in oruor inai me PUDIIO may " " i nuitu imrij preaaiorr iniereaia very poor opinion of the people of .this coast who are opposed to Chinese immigration. He are supporting. " jne inavitania conclusion, therefore. can look into the future and seem been grossly abused through many SIBLEY A WARNING FOB OREGON T to see there similar momentous generations by ignorant and careless movements in which the country may men ul rreat areaa of u In tnfa yMO lu,uuBu aoa. ana ecuuom c country, have beett misunderstood, change equally remarkable. May It miu,ArA ronafdrd ii.. HS3 warnlna sounded bv Judze mtlc& trns.Whe lo. if treated intelligently, and .. . . . - peraiHis iu iia neaaiong career or - n,ihr trnii. ir ,ui T HERE Is no occasion Hearst to re-read bold letters over and those IS "at Mr Ta" WU,d M Pre8,deDt F W m,.T.o;art PTn'SillJ oit'K those Arc,h stand for CnlneBe exciuslonT "monopollaedr eduoa&onai work-rn C.y- BaaFwd they iSS IccomnUah lZ va- n nn. us 1 nil nrinrai uiu. wm wmxii. lu i iui - - Mr. Bryan, commenting on there ,ave our national honor, for it cannot They Know a Good Thins. . . ., ' . I la that tha nuhllraflnn nf .nntpltlM.. t-raaa oervice or me . . . a. ,hou,,, b, m(ul- before and noriite; prejudiced" on this subject Enter-L "r'11 7m'. V on"' co"''" "oa. ... Ia-J1 AW a . . . I .Of 1119 OUUldWQO VI iU.IlU U VUII ? I " winiuB tueae Tiewa is u prooaDie e,t,oluhed ta Jaffn. Uraaly aa a pro- ?w announced. that.Vatrtek over again In each city he visits. One LrnrAMinfi. nf Mr Tff om rpAtifnir nf thorn was enough: the I . 0 - ' I XT. iinlaaaailmnaa th. ... e e a The latest from Taft la that Ma Orroat the importance of providing ! against It in Oregon, is having a ,;lurid exemplification in Great Brlt j aln. The number of nnemployed ; men and women In the, commercial -'center, there 1. appalling, and one of the causes for it is England', land lordism. In Glasgow, Manchester, (Liverpool, Birmingham, Bradford, .Sunderland and the Lancashire dis trict generally, the statement is FULTON AND THE PEOPLE STREET EXPECTORATION S XPECTORATION on the streets ommendatlons made to San FrannlRcn authorities. h IK. r. report, eald that be "had not cent tuberculosis congress in that to re"read that typical The necessity for the destruH . cnDOJ V" : .1 ENATOR FULTON has asaln spoken. He was at Forest Grove Wednesday, and, according to a exlat when the nation a children are nanaa over to roraienera ror trainina." I - . - . . . rT " - : "? of Great efforta are thlrefore belns made , J?,,L IT,, -I'r?? fi"M,5 to aecure an endowment and to ralae the I " Iwl." r'" " atandard of the college. In the circular! . . m very meager, after all; they expose Uanda made by the laboring men of oraed "hit aTarae Mr. the Standard Oil smell on three or the country that they be protected from tten4 tbe Chrit,tia.n achopis. Sdd hlmwlf to earrV out thYVoJi! four men. whereas there are no a horde of OHneae cooU.. who are not doubt 10 times as many, and, by the I aaalmllated or brought to the American I Into existence the American board had! of greed' "T0Br? "1 CUnn,Dg' ? 5V oVaTearonably reward the newpspapers of the country ( did the ' g Mr. Hearst s scock or letters is an(1 denounce, aa unreaaonabla tha da- I r mo importance oi protiamg If nnf iv ...... - v. n,ootro, o.r n- h athrm . w , , . ?r a"P r i. " Ur. Tift ) ,Mfi. u oncuy .v uui..vi iuu uouuu i i . . 'i i ''j ""--b"'! .vv. ... j r i iimuuo uja.ua uj mo Murannf men or I preaaea mat a larce majority or Hinau n-. : , ."f v.. A 1 on three or the country that they be protected from boy "tui "nd the ChrlatUn ecboole. j.'d irJ i" i lk nWn., here are no a horde of Chinese cool... who ar. r taLfa.h EXPECTORATION on the streets ,,.. ...TAn..h. level of llvlnr but almolv dlanlaca Am- founded Jaffna collrge, and for more Oorernor Haskell amy. he haa a let was the sublect of ureent rec- wajr n,ne tentn8 of tnem arft RPUb' 'e;"n t. -nl!7fr. thn generation It haa been aendlng tr from President Jo..TeSrltt"n was xne suDjeci or urgent rec- erlcan workmen. It la fortunate for forth a auperlor grade of atudewta They last winter, which he will publlah with ommendatlons made to San . . . , the country that thus early In hi. fill Important poaltlona in every walk, In the permission of the president. Which , ... , .. Rtlll It la well pnrmeh for voters , .... . .. nr. .i..ni nr ihi. '.u niuniMita h. Fi.M.tr. i r r. letter of Mr. Li..,iv .it.. n..i . . i I aa the Island of Ceylon. Wherever they I state commerce of wblakey Into pro- . t V. clearly align, hlmaelf with the capital- so their Chriatlan character and eounS hlbitlon territory. And Ha.kell adda: A. J. Cassett, l.tlo aide. IscholaxshlD win resDect and admiration. "It waa your answer to mv mnul nthor riAonl. r Parents cannot help aeelng tha differ- assistance and would freese file heart timer people oij.no. between the two typoa of school, (of any honest public official aeeklns are In favor Of land continue to send their aona where to administer the lawa of hla state aa announced himself for or atrainnt ntv Statement No. 1." This mav h t. tinn r.f anntnm TOO a nn. nf fha fit then at the head of the Pennsylvania Worklngmen and inci Keueiaiij, uio wwiuoui w . . ... : " I a ti cihu. ..Uh. D.i,ln l made that In the j neighborhood of .ooay Knows that Senator results of Dr.. Koch's discovery of , the r' lCB""s rThinA. T,3r -.I.i- fee best result, in education can be a the people by thelr votea had'm.3itlJ! 100 000 skilled workers are Idle ttllon H anainsi uie statement. He tubercle bacillus. That necessity has , - " , V'Z 3 cuni- The present la a critical time in law." will the'preeldent allow lupub- frnrn no fanlt of their own and that Deat Wnrself for the nomination for become widely understood through- Personal Dear Mr. Casaett: In Mr. clearly rrom tnese expressions how India, and the fact that somo of the llcatlonT 4 . . tSSilSmSii Benator ,y belng oppo8ed to the out the civilized world, and fs every- Patton's absence I venture to write you the two leading candidates for presl- a-JeVf.nA& Son-,n-Law Length declare, that r. their wlt'a end to orevent extreme Statement; Mr. Cake beat himself where the subject of stringent reg- on a Putlcal anestion which seem. , to dent stand on this question, and will schools is one evidence thit training for Taft ; mut be elected thla time, then re- . to their Wit . ena lO prevent extreme nnm,nann h nr ,,l0tln0 h.Tt be real Importance and interest, doubtless act on election day ac- cltl.enshlp is an essential part of ' 'our year, hence, and at the ex- sufferlng, verging on starvation. The arter ne got the nomination by not ulatlons. The germs of consumption . th twenty-seventh congressional r-ordineiv modern missionary work, plration of. that time, Mr. Roosevelt raising of distress funds i, Becoming a and nr for the Statement; the peo- cannot be frozen to death. dlsrlctJ8 xrJr! the o?d time CrdlDSly' . ' on Ttt TpV'r? a common occupation of the well to Ple ,of Oregon, by a great majority In experiments, sections of affect- aKltator, is running for congress against Unclo jroe anDarentlv haa entered i? J' ?5n w.ho wou,d never W of do. and the eatablishln of debots declared for the Statement-and as ed tubercle areas have been alter- j. c siblev. of Franklin. Sibley ha. . .t""!.,, V rea a .I ni. barnyard If h. hadn't - for the' disbursing of alms a common between Fulton and the people we nately frozen and thawed for a pe- had. as you know, rather a variegated I ; .. . . V, V. ,:. ,f' lnon, made a mistake jn attacking Mr. 1 Be Good. I 1 1 a. .t . , . . I . - I .... i.. I Villi LUrUUKU 111 Lilt) AJall V 1 1 J R n RTT fr. T)rvan haa laM hlmsalf rrmn 4n .A.4nli w.wtf y, b, ., I . , . I . I . . . ... . i a w aw l i II 1L 1L 1H III HHV I IIH IRHHl. VOPV n CtTi fT- 1 v wa vvtu-wivaB, BUU Ax. UIJBII I a -! .. l - ,...i i fnriT inna Trt noor him ' i v . ip n t n KAnii ni irnn to 10 hjiu. a liiiuk. i - - uVaa-v 1 n 1 . ti,. w -r 1 1 For many years, tne pauper ciass l"t M"l?"uu e"m8 wc, a8 iUU 1" .Jr. " ful In he can be elected .nto 5.T-2.c"r wiS? ra r unon Buosianiiaiir aavisea men- 01 virintv as in tne beerinninsr J i . ' i -..-' if..".'! can't la.r all Toil statesman Tn. mw a rout, ly.not for long. I plain publlo opinion 1. honest and stout tor anotner tnmg, his remarks about And If. going to get YOU if you don't m.. them honesty ana to eay now he came bv Now, the Nebraskan'a. personal See Haskell, who chummed with a law- has never been Impugned;. ful In he can be elected speaker one thing, the speaker referred to the In England has been, large, us poor m iuB uUBiuninK. a .,-.,. w01lId certalnly be again. For one sufficient reason Nebraakah as "a man who haa a break- Be good- i una imw uuntuifo, ui nua. . - - - - .1 V . , 1 7" " , ; asit tnat you ao everyining possiDie in i tne next nouse. umnon i moutn some years ago wmcn UDaerve, called good times,- The number or I " iw uo unu i iuai ecima ejecieu iu epuLum oa toe tQ. matter In Mr. Slbley'a favor, on H.amaI a4 . n ln. a wn. a I WCU ,CJCV.VOU UI U1B UWU IIH I I V M I I HLTcK L M-1 M IT1 1 1 1 V I' 1 I I 111 H 111111 (1 II HF II 1 1 ! . V, , . , 1. n . n 1 1 ArtT-nir. T A .nil I , i . . . .. iaiin..uo wiuiraucu . " "i,. . -. ' ' i . . . . i i nat last cnance to register ror tne or anoiner tning, nis remarxa about And if. gi week or less comDrlses the bulk of ine , Poiis, ana arter, aDout a year carried anywnere and everywhere, vested interests win have run consid- .,.Hn ,,fH nw f- Bryan's wealth called forth a chal- watch out- fi .nrirra" ta . ttfimnt hv ago. In a carefully prepared speech, ready to be a medium for spreading eration at hi. hands. r Z..Zmb:".J ' il"?!..t.-e21-aJe.-tlle "S A ?i" -ow" B ftoJ v. Uil (,. rtl I ... nwkr .1 TM. I, nntta I11,,mlnt!v nn thp lcw UB'" 10 pro- a writer in a uetroit paper, to say , - "-7' u"'COD tuo ". Buiisuimim mai. - x , . vide against forgetfulness or emerjt- that the most of these families are Pie chose him. he would not be a rapidly supplanting ignorance In question of what sort of people have encl 6,t j8 reglBter now 0Bn less than s month from pauperism, candidate. these matters is, wherever applied, been running this government. The e,ectlon d w,n want t VQte is not in the least exaggerating labor Under allythese circumstances reducing the death rate, lowering it Sibleys and McLaurins and Forakers and unre 'l8tered lt wlll me the conditions la Great Britain. ' ' Senator Fulton puts himself forward in 15 years from 24. to 19 in New and Aldrfches and Cannons and lnconvenlence and irouble of findlng . In a population of 40,000,000,. the in a very disagreeable light. He York, and from 18 to 14 In Chicago. Paynes and Hopklnses and Flints Bjx freeholderg and , through lands of Great Britain are chiefly says, in effect, that he is greater and Wherever city officials, or others in and Perkinses and all the rest tedIou8 proce88 of vot,n by af. owned by less than half a million of moro importance .than the rank authority fail to apply sanitation as represent not the people at all, but f,davlt An neJt week and untll landlords. England's land laws areana 01 nis party, ana taan tneireiaiea to preveniiDie aiseases tney oianuaru kju, mo uiS nunuauo, "" TueBdav October 20 at B n ' made by Jfingiana s .lanaioras. ,iaie yi an yuruva, wuo usre wuuiuuwmij ucgngcui., auu 10 u.o, mo iuauv. vumiiuu.. . land is not taxed at all. Occupied rejected him, and Cake too for that extent in part responsible for a letter is valuable as written proof land, especially that in the cities,' is sufficient reasons. many a death that might otherwise of what everybody knew, but lightly taxed, so lightly that- it Fulton hopes to undo the will of have been avoided. By the way, it may be worth ob- affords but meagre publi reyenue. the people of Oregon through the serving that while Sibley had played The game preserves, - running' Into ne'B or tne national Republican or- xmje. hiu uiwau MAtujii or Democrat a iittiewnne, ne soon ais flmAd: 1 brMklnv .rAv what he possesses he made bv talklna l t? r.n- and writing. Mr. Cannon la reporteda HI. acts of the past are now crying much richer man than Bryan, and he aloud did not acquire his money by talking Be good; an,SLwrlt,n,r' . . , It'a easy by dubious methods to climb The opponents of the Peerless One And fool the dear people a part of the would better confine their attacka to time criticisms of the political theories he But aonnnr nr ..n. i u. ..... rn.k 1.. 1.1- .1 i -.. - ' " " yui, Avii i-'i miu 1 in. uDiBuiini aimirH I an alone. If they were all a. honest as He there would be no call for muck- rakers. slime Be good. v hundreds of thousands of acres are ganlzation and Ta?fr Fulton and his exempted from taxation ; altogether, organs, are openly boasXing that if ' The growing exactions of the land- Oregon goes, for Taft, the legislature 'lords, the multiplication of their must go for Fulton or some one holdings by the gradual disappear- else AcceptaDie to tne "interests." ance of the small land owners, are If majority or plurality of the SCIENCE covered that as a tool of the Interests he was on the wrong elde politically, CIENCE Is doing wonders these As Mr. Archbold naively says, Sibley days In various directions. Noth-1 "is now squarely in the Republican ing quite so noticeably great, I fold," hence "sound in every way,' perhaps, as the telegraph, the and entirely reliable to work for the fartnra inra svstem necnliarlv can-looters of Oregon prefer Taft. then telephone and the electric motor, trusts and help rob the people, .able of DroducInK poverty and dis-1 Fulton will go to the legislature and yet developments and knowledge of No wonder the hurrahs among the treBS on the one band, and overland- insist that by that token a lot of many kinds that a generation ago people for the Republican party are lordlam on Uie otner. iubiuub w uibi uoa; Boaii wnwear bccihcu miraculous, in-1 not as vociierous aa, iormony. ' 1 The present crisis is syajiathetic themselves; shall prove themselves credible. with the panic In this country, and recreant political scoundrels; shall For example, we scarcely more a eequel to the great mllitarx ex- show forth to the world that they than momentarily notice the Incident pense of the Boer war, and naturally are liars, utterly .independable, trait- that the other day a man talked by extreme distress follows among those on to the people who elected them, wireless telephone with his wife 60 who have only their, dijily labor to This is Fulton's game. It seems miles distant, as they were passing, . d.n.nd nnnn fnr thaip daflv bread I that the national Republican com-1 that far apart, in warshios Dlowinc ' As this and past events eloquently mute is supporting ana approving tne Atlantic ocean assert, it is an evil condition, .when- In 111,8 case, wnat are the 70,000 THE RED LIGHT WOMEN it ever great areas of land fall Into the people of Oregon who voted for, the hands of the few while the many are statement xno. 1 law, to make lt com left landless. It Is a condition to pulsory, to doT Is Fulton bigger awaken grave concern in the United than 48,000 majority of the people States, where in the 20 years from or Oregon t 1880 to 1900 not less than one tenth of the American farmers drifted from ownership Into tenantry of their farms. The census figures for those years reveal, that the owner ship of the American home is swift ly slipping away from the American family. DRYliAlSD FARMING p: .ERHAPS no more Important subject was discussed at the re- ,cent Trans-Mississippi congress than that of dry farming. It In 1880, 74 per cent of the has been gradually earned during farmers owned weir iarms, in 1890 tne past quarter 01 a century or less the number was down to 71 per cent, that fairly good and reasonably prof and In 1900 it had dropped to 64 per liable crops can be raised on "semi- cent, a loss of ownership and a drift arid" lands, that cannot be irrigated toward. landlordism to awaken here I Certain ' methods of cultivation, it grave concern in the present appall-1 has been found, wlll produce fair log conditions beyond the Atlan tie. crops what in the Atlantle states would be considered largo crops IF PROIUBITIOX NOW, WHAT on land that up till recently was con- JNEXT7 . sidered totally valueless for any thing but grazing. And as the na- T ROUBLES for the American sa- tive grass has In most cases been loon are multiplying. For a pretty well destroyed, the lands had I year the mortality among them has been aa great as though a war of extermination were on. Tha am-elllcg tide of local option and pro hibition has swept them out of exist t nee at tha rate of SO a day for the runtry, and It promises To keep up the rate till tha end of the year. At SO feet frontage for each doomed aa loon, the destruction has been at the rite of a mile of frontage a week, or 12 mica for tte year. It Is a career rf tavoe fcore extraordinary than m f--t hcpefal day dream of the( become almost worthless for that purpose. Eastern Oregon 1. greatly Inter ested In this subject of successful "dry farming." Throughout Central and Southeastern Oregon lie vast ex panses of land, that with dry farm ing made screenful will injport a large population of fairly properous people, where up till recently only aa occasional slockmaa and his em ployes haT de!L Already, in tact, la Crook aad Laks eosntiea. and oth ers, masy carefal, iateJ.Ig-nt. Ie4ss- HE JOURNAL'S advice to the red light women is to quit their calling. If it brings them to their Dresent straits, lt Is a ore- If anybody 30jMPimi. mMn. f livelihood. A bet- or zo years ago had predicted that U.. iir. ,mon friends and In the this would happen, he would have way of respectability is open, tp any oeen conuiaereo. a lunatic. M of them xfcey ix, if they Transcontinental trains, running Bsek t0f attain Bncn a nfe, for, to the ai iuu apeea. are xaiaing wun one persistent, practically nothing la Im another by the Inductive system of j poggible. teiepnonmg. ureat progress Has Ut however, they are from choice been made lately by the Wright determined to pursue their calling, brothers, and others. In navigating xhft Journal advises thehi to quit tne air. in meaicai ana surgical Portland. There are other cities science men .have learned more In a where they are less under the ban. few years than they learned In There are rtlaces where the law Is thousands of years before. Smallpox ie8g draBti(r and the authorities more has become a negligible discomfort; wining to wink at them and their diphtheria no longer carries tne ter- business. There are spots where ror of almost certain death to chiKl pUDnc agitation against them is less dren; consumption is being cured Dr0nOnnced. and .where they will be and prevented; leprosy is round to e driven to dodging the police and be curable. Our children s children the law. will have a wonderfully easier life jf Portland is inhospitable, why than wa. as we have an easier and remain in Portland? If Portland better life than our grandparents. I authorltles are backed by the law. As significant, if more prosy and they are. why remain here to things, are happening in the ma-1 combat laws, officers and courts. terlal-mechanlcal realm. Lewis when It Is so easy la cities lees hoe- Nixon recently called attention to I tile to lire In peace? From the the economy of power and space at-1 standpoint of the women, every con- . a a. a av. w aV mt T - lainaDi uroagn um sn 01 pro-1 gj deration argues for tnem to go ducfer gas. Heretofore a large space where their manner of life Is less of the ball of a ship waa given up to challenged. Their own Wends and the power plant, the massive engine, advisers nrust confess thla, and it the batteries of boiler, and the mine will be wisdom If they, too, advise of eoaL necessary to send a Lusl-ltbe women ,to go where prosecutions, Unia at great speed across the At-1 laws courts' and officers will not no lantjc The Invention of turbine en-1 lest them. ' glnee bad considerably reduced thlsj if other cities raise, ao hand spac, but still the problem was to! against a red Ugh t district aad there ret aa equal or greater amount of are many soch, that Is their business, power from some material and If they do not object to red light aooro orctprlEg small space, and women, and many do not. tt is bo this probl-a. fs bow 11 f arty solved. J concern f Portland and no fault of DEPOSIT GUARANTY ARGUMENT A Tennessee Bank Makes Vigorous Reply to Criticisms by ' 'Wall Street Journal ' th. There once was a period oh, list to mv aong Ba good when bljr men, like kings, could do nary a wrong Be good; But that la no more, and If a better today Just to worry along as you can on your Pay; When temptera approach you. cry out. "You go 'way" Ba good. To the Editor of the Wall Street Jour-j from a careful reading of Saxe's poem Th. ti.r ,. .n.- , nal I thank you for your recent brief 1 ok the "Six Blind Men of Indoetan." I Tha ""Ah 'alln fcrowa longer Put very lclsm of my address before the Tenncs- temperate and respectful crlt ' Bank Do nee Bankers' association on posit Guaranty." Without desiring to enter into -any captious or contentious controversy on tba subject, I do wish to offer a few suggestions In answer to your two prin cipal criticisms, feeling sure that you are Just aa sincere as I am, and that we are both aeeklng after the truth. Allow me to sug-ffest. In tba first place, that your vision la obscured by your DOlnt.of view. You look at the queation alone from the standpoint of tne ao-cauea gooa Danics, and assume tnat a Dana once sound and well man aged will alwaya be sound and well managea, ana utterly ignore the possi blllty that the depositors of a once cood and well managed bank will ever need protection. But thla la not all. xou aiso overlook the distinction be- tween a private individual, endowed with natural rights and a mere crea ture of the law. with auch riant a only aa tna law coalers upon it. This dis unction la vital, a: nd cannot be Ignored every branch of tha law In any fair treatment of the Question. It la recognised both In morale and in Again you assume that the disposition tboae of lndlviduals-that the. prudeno and habits of bank, are settled and known to the public, or may be., a. are conservatism and Internal aodndness o a bank are aa open and' well known to tna business puoiio as, are tne proflig acy, extravagancea and alcoholic In dulgences of an Individual. And again, you assume tnat the busi ness publlo la aa free to use and deal with the banks or not. aa with certain Individuals. Ignoring the fact that In tha exigencies of modern bualness, business men ara oompauea to aeai with and trust many banks of the Internal condition ana manaa-enienc or wmcn tney Know ana caa anow aoeoiuieiy nothing. a a a a And lastly, you utterly Ignore all consideration of the depositor, who is tha crime ana most essential ractor in tha banking business. Thla, aa already Indicated, lis, I think, your most rad ical error, mm lt la or ail who oppose guaranty. - Tha depositor can no more be left oat la any fair consideration of tola Question, than ne can in any stb- tem of laws for the organisation and conduct of baaka. It la not ta any rela tion between tha banks with each other, ba4 or indifferent, that the true test of the fairness and policy af deposit guaranty la to be found; but la tha re lation between tba depositor, and tha banka. Tow eannet Ignore that relation without running Into radical error. And wno la the a epos i tor t nm is me great bnaiseaa class, the general public, upon whoa prosperity net only the banka bat tba vary perpetuity ef all our institu tions depend. Would th banka kill the gooa that lay a their gelden egg? Panic well nigh this, and It la that dlstmot on the part ef depositors re sulting from lark of security for their depoeils that produce, aad aastalaa Penlfl. t-anew ane tot anggewting inat i imTta m eaay leant aa . Important Iaaon think your point of view not unlike that of these blind men. vhn .anh in tt,wn happening to come In contact with the animal's aide, tusk, snout, knee, ear aaia urn oniy, concluded with great confidence, that the whole elephant was "very like" a wall, a apear, a snake, a tree, a fan, or a rope, according to tha part he touched. You seem to have loucnea oniy one part or aspect of tha great Bysiaut ut Dunning tnat occu pied by tha bank Itself and to be judging the whole system from that part or standpoint only, ir you will honestly and Impartially broaden your . I ( n ...... . I. 1. n ... - . . . loiwn auu iii iu view ine depositor. tne general bualness publlo, and all relations and aspect, of tha banking system I am persuaded that our opln- wi ui nvi uo essentially airrerent. Your second crltlcUm that depoalt guaranty will "amount practically to either a government or a private bank ing monopoly- i. also, 1 respectfully maintain, merely specious. Your predicate la, that either the "good banka" or the government must have rigia regulation over all the banka ao as to prevent any bank from going wrong"; and thla, you conclude, will miijuuii. iii vnucr a oana. or mem monopoi the power of upon tne "good banks' or upon the government. . . . e e - e Tha clan ! Is for national nnl.tiAn of national banka, and atate regulation of state banka, and nothing 1. to be gajueu oy ooscuring tne issue with 1m joaaioie suppositions, uoea auch regu atlon amount to a "banklne- monnnnlv In tne regulating atate or nation T This i. ma question inat must ba met- Doea lt not occur to you that tha na- either a bank or govern ly of banking, according to Df regulation as conferred uouai guvcrnmam . now regulate. . na tional banka, and the statea. regulate wMi&v. iu. uivf nave MWSyB dona so, with no queation In ajijr quar ter of their power to do ao or or tha necessity ana gooa policy or such regu latlonT . The government does not engage la the banking business by regulating the tloi banking business, and ao long a. It does not engage tn the business It cannot Itself have a monopoly of the busi- Tbere ara honest men tn all thaaa avocations, who perhaps need no regu lation, but because they oaanot be win nowed out. ana aiaunguianad from tha aianonest ones in aavanc. tney muet also submit to these regulation, for me general rood: ana ao. the -"rood- bank, that perhaps for tha present ne1 no regulation. . and whose depositors possibly need no additional present pro tecttoa, cannot be separated from the niui, and they most, and anoaid wil lingly, submit to such additional rgn- iatiows-aa are essential Iwr tna general protection of depositors, their own a rail as other, and the genera proa perl it and stability ef the public Vu ni nes and H Is impossible te tell hew boo the depositor of the "rnod. "Wg" bank wfll nays argent and practicaJ need for that protection, for thero ia ne certain asaurarwa tbat It i 1 al wave remain "rood." J. A. PITTS. - Sashvtlle. Ttsa,'ept. 12. Hit. each year teBe good; o let this advice trickle Into your ear Be good; A good politician ia ha who will try To meet the demands In a loud publlo cry; This sentiment, paramount. Bona can deny Be good. Charles R. Barnes In New Tork World. Harriet Ann Boyd's Birthday. Mis. Harriet Ann Boyd, the dis tlngulahed archaeologist, wa. born In Boston on OctobexJl. 1S71. Bhe re ceived her education. at Smith mil... and graduated from that Institution In 1892,., with tha degree of A. M. Bhe began her atudlea at the American school of classical stndiea at Athena Greece. In 1S98. At the outbreak of the Oreoo-Turklsh war aha became a nurss In tha Greek army and for her dlatlngulahed services in that capacity aha waa deoorated with tha Red ( by Queen Olga of Greece. After her return to tha .United Statea aha did valuable work aa nur.e at Tamn. Fin during tha Spahisb-Ametican war. in the. fall of 1891 she returned to Athens and resumed her studies at tha Ameri can school. In 1S0O aha became In- ktraiffAV In .rfha.silft.-v . Sml.t. ..I lege and haa ainoe honored bv rn being made a fellow of the Amerinan w classical school at Athena At different times aha waa engaged on excavation a In Crete, at Kamist. Mycenae and at Gournla. Crate and contributed vain. able- article, to archaeological publica tions In tha United States and Great Britain. ) This Date In History. 1412 Columbus sighted the Bahama Islands, tha first discovery of land. 1774 The Provincial oonrreaa met at Concord. John Hancock presiding. 1711 The bank of Providence, the first bank la Rhode Ialaad. begaa to discount. 1717 The English defeated the Dutch fleet tn the battle of Cinnrr. down. HIT General Andrew FlcJcenev' SI a tlngulahed officer of tha Revolution. dle4. 1451 The New York -clearing house begaa operations. 14 The sine work, at Bethlehem. Pa., began eperatlona. llfl The funeral of Oiarle. Stewart mell waa held at Dunlin. ' Perr-eU lil Twenty-seven boilers eTrlodel at nnamoBin. a-. In. fa killing flv. man. A Terrible Strata. rrosa tha Chlcaro Record-Herald Ta, who wsa Charlotte Cordayr 1 daano. turn makes womea a hata f I beard ymir aaa say something er day about getting en , e brand. Now ma e-ut and " ,b.r"I,i.1 rm-n Na4ihut end in' ISI.aee Kerb r. old. . hew tavd It mi,) fmmkm 1 to let ft t It after getting It la hi. banda like Uau" " " Arrhhold. a man rigrrt