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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1908)
Hh (J KNAL Lfl.fr "A" .m?.te- .aid 1111 " nobody is a candidate, j ?.. . " - """"" iureyroBnt iueir mure Miairet;uy. Haas is Dut one wny not end this effort to debauch ah nroKWCTpmr kewspapeb. constituents, they do not act the part example that happens to be paTehtTpledged legislators? Why not stop c s. ncMo.. ...rsbiiaber of honorable men." yet. these men The blowing up of the Gallagher this endlees agitation for overturn-! 7.7 popular will and substituting j COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF ftf mnlnf rrrrnt Bandar) ana " j" 7, tt7V..a . . ' vumr will ana BUDSUIUUng uj morntol .t -me Baud- spoken general understanding. What of the human passions this creature the personal control of things by a tsif ... tund. or. then shall be said of any man bound Ruef. hi. cohorts and his henchmen few? If nobody iTa Candida?! why SMALL CHANGE But tha kaiser can't very well abolish mea of TTT 8obU toe rm I ... 1 ' u uouwuuidu i io w i u uuuuuj is m candidate, wny i th. by an absolute, positive, specific aroused. A newspaper helped to feed not stop this tomfoolerr and let ns "l"u ft .n : - , - ipieage. u ne snouia Tioiate UT I the name by attacking Heney. The have a peaceful and nrofitahi. rtw a. !. hr sleeted effect vaa rn mMhn th.. . . ,..a . . , . . . I " w I'mu, " .6 i"ovi um i vuou a ueiuuruuv ana 'aeuaucnea ramer man order. The Incident of legislative session f Haas, the pistol shot In the court room, that other In the prison cell. The country will get postal sav rsTJEPHoxEs uxin ma. bomb. a-som. Ail ArpiHmraU reached ky tbeae aambets. tII th operator th. department ros want. - Eaat Site attics B-Ui; Bat MS. PPEEION ADVEETISINO EKPEK8ENTATIVS Vr-eJaod-BesJainln Special Aawtlaln Agency, traaawlrk Building, 225 Fifth arram. Maw ark I 1007-Og Boyoa Bauding. Chicago. nbaaipttoa Tmna by man or to any addraea ta Ua Lai tod .States, Canada or alaxloo: .' IlaTT.Y. dm no js.ootom aaoDth s m I for two years. WHAT IS BEING DONE. CON GRESSMAN HAWLE1"? I T IS the seventeenth day of No vember, and time Is slipping by. Millions of people rejoice la the proa me nose festival managers , uiui it greai snow. the mass meetings and the eyes offings banks about the same time, it a WhrtlA naHrkn An m Can Fp.nnln.n I IT aim onv ny99 .AOTffA. A1 .i sion pass another appropriation bill tngeiy of Koefi8m In nnnflppy San ' i ,, It look, if William of Germany, SUNDAT. . i . . Oae y.........J.80 One noatt., DAtLT AND SDN DAT. One rr. ...... ..$7.60 Oae mootb I Joseph Cannon will I pranclsco. J5 iCatoLition Qinrsnttt Jhkfmtifo tbmtjbt etmktio oftkm. OBsaos scxnaiAi, Attrtrtiittt Certi64 Cimlttiav Bio Book probably be speaker, and the Wll- lametta is still fettered. The toll taker takes 60 cents a ton off the sale price ot every product shipped out and adds 60 cents a ton to the cost ot every article shipped Into the Willamette region. The toll costs many a Willamette farmer more ROOSEVELT AND ROOT T HE NEW YORK WORLD dally advocating the election of President Roosevelt to the een- 1 i - - y xw.mjmj. It Is not very strange that Ruef 'a erapr' m,gnt 6etn- lawyers need BnepJal' dntActtTAfl tnl The next Cuhan rvntiitln m v. m- protect them. People are becoming 5l.ertnU1 Vacl sDa' tr0P v out of patience with men who "as- Is sasslnate the law." I ?n thlf ort ' yeather lasts, few ini ujr preaicuon or a uu wiumr. Kaiser Wllllnm aan It la fn. Vim I - atfHy' w a V a A. v A AAA AAA 'oS! Running SLots 7a 'apcr Aaa proved br mrcattrabofl taf the cirrvlatiom ntord art kept with j and th rlrcmlatioa itMtrd wits tach aeemrmcr (Aat mdweitimt mar relr on anr a taermeau cv aaaav wmot bj tot pvomnen JB emler the owoertorp oo asaoajvaieat VV" , i- - - - e Certainly Japan wouldn't gx to war i. ,"" iaat sports so many e e Nat and Edna will doubtless be hs,p Py yer aftei untu the next dWoroo - Bat how can an unconstitutional law nr HIIMa si man's KkadMA . Our companions please us less from the charm which we find In their conversation than the charm they find In ours. Grevllle. ate to succeed Senator Piatt, to rule the Patharlanri. hut h Tn.v K.P.tfJ1'?!?'.?'': r-,",'r"ot be sorry . . i , - l "cjr at a m0 aousiuie io mace any viuui uowsuauoia ana ubys a jarirn lAasnn var rn mom bouusi auum it. .i j n u, . i , . - - : i . " M"' " 1 oicij cor luau uw ou uia oiaio, i urummeni men are seconainsr - the various mnnarnha hofnr. v, , - , . , I " wavra w AAA AAA AIAI Vi coumy ana bcbooi lues. t cusib motion. The World takes back none n many a business man more than, do of Its criticism of Roosevelt as Drea- au nis state, county ana scnooi taxes, ident, still Insists that he Is an un The toll adds to the freight rates, safe man In that position; but ar- written for The Journal br tv nnt niir nn traffic that onoa hi hnat I i. i i v. I written xor The Journal by Fred I " " i buvjo, yuna iu&iuauy, uiai as coma .Denton. I but on such as eoea bv rail. I hA a nnwor fnr vnnA fn tv. I The effect of a mani For thirty years this toll taker There he would be onlv on of B I Yamhill count-. .,S.,ffAS??i S .'v! WM ..... . - . x .. . - . hln. 7U-f,iiu u-r""- - "w TI nas stooa ai tne aoor 01 every iarm men, dui wouia De one or influence, I rr.-; iZ;-. uul cr'; i j . v i .v. i vi- ... . . K.rr.r "" . s. uuuie aim everjr iuwu uuuio iu iuo auu uib iuuupuce wouia do in isi wicx piant nas made the difference, vnllav and nollficted tribute. For I rleht direction, atirt In nnpHoit In I - thirty years he has turned.the pro- body. . aKeth.nt vZPy Ve6.9 "chiim-bffl ceeda Into nrivate Dockets, taklne I Secretary of KtntA Rnnt annaan I fools they did not know what thv his bounty on a highway that nature however, to be in the lead for sena' Tnl? tha'nted' tohIfecthedeTfnai never Intended should be other than tor to Bucceed Piatt, and Roosevelt states senator. To show that they meant free. For thirty years he has col- may com In two years later.. If he their mind, "at1, thlast1 e?eotion"y leeterf hi a tea. and day bv dav laid desires. Mr. Pnnt (a n varv oM I voted by 48.000 mulnritv nn mnr in. kia Knriian nnn th- nii . inrtna. man i... o, .v. "tr4c"n& U members of the legislature better. i iv.vii ufvu "vj v.., i uco u uvuu. louuiieu mo i to Touow the popular wllL i e It seems likely that the first three .oivcib uii.no name or the next sena tor from New Tork will be Roo. e It Is even worse In Boston than here eggs are 60 cents a doian there. But the price of beans remains moderate. Mrs. Ruth Brvan-Leavltt la writing a play. So probably her husband aereea mat tne farther a Dart thev n v. th. try ana tne enterprise or toe region, country, very valuable services m bis , .I KIVn columns going to show wuat brand of intellectual dishonesty standing in the way of material de- present office, but the objection to Wfi 0 peiafalsWnli; veloDment, holding back the wheels him as a senator Is that he has al- excuse. That is all the columns of abuse oblis-ation? '' '"eir A NEW LIGHT IN THE TOWER of progress. ways been a trust lawyer. His cor- MM SJi. I - Joe Cannon for speaker, and the poration connections ought to be re- tne legislature into believing that he GPiT"lht hag Aeen 8e.en ln Willamette asking for freedom! garded as a disability. He was SS, belling e d'dV from "StVW, toe 1 an 1 ower. a weeK ago Congress three weeks away, and Ryan's attorney in the traction ma- conscientious and honorable motives. We were being Informed daily Mm pnAfidln Hi a mtnr! Whr niDUlation in New York, was th at, .f 12 t"or.ab.1? lsiAor v Tii.. j ii , I r " - - - - -- ' I .""" .."" ley are not smart vuo u.luia ,unJMUI1 i"- is Congressman Hawley and what torney lor Hyde of Insurance scab- nou'n ror that, and neither is the DEPEW AGREES WITH FULTON validated Statement No. 1 pledges in the news from Washington? vregon. ine reason tnen assigned was that the taking of Statement No. I was, per se, unconstitutional. It Is different now. The position has been shifted. That contention is- given up. It, Is no longer Insisted in the elevated tower that Statement S ENATOR DEPEW has delivered I an address in which he lauded dal fame, and has long been the head adviser of some of the great trusts. In a letter to Sidney Webster Mr. Harriman Baid Ryan's success In all his" maniptila tions, traction deals, tobacco combina- the machine system of politics, tlon, manipulation of the State Trust and pointed to Oregon as a ter-1 company into the Morton Trust com No. 1 pledges are themselves uncon-1 rib le example and warning against piuiyi the Shoe ana Leather bank into the Btitutlonal. The toaner has learned (iinlwnipnt nf nr inrfor.nM iti, Western National bank and then again otherwise. Colonel C. E. S. Wood, the machine Bystem. That the peo- an astute lawyer, appeared on the pie of a state should, 'undertake to scene and declared Statement No. 1 and actually legislate for themselves, pledges constitutional, and that the in any case, or should; dictate to or Dakota decision has no bearing on morally compel a legislature to elect them. , Judge' Henry B. McGinn, an their choice for senator, is to Sena-I tively unobjectionable. But Mr. Root as able Jurist, who voted against Cham- tor DeDew an unreasonable, in r.on-1 Unltea States Ben&tor. dealing with berlaln. In an emphatic opinion de- gruous. DODulistic. radical, unconsti- ?.ubHo.clust,on8 reay ttec tfe . . I - ' I rinannln 1 Sv4Aaun V.I. I a . . ciarea statement No. 1 pledges ton- tutlonal and altogether anomalous V. " " "-iuis. atftntlnnat th tn n.V. . -.- .. u- lu practice ms proiession Detween 71 JI v I , h ui piwccuuig. uuu 110 is uiicny sessions of congress and still act u " "earing on mem, ana OPPOBea to It. their loeI arivlTth( t. inM.hi. mai II IS ine amy or tne legislature Of nonrso Rn am Piatt on aMfU No degree of intellctual ability can lus- ti ciett, - uamuenain. won. area AIwl n Pnnt nd rr.no .r, iriir- ry election of a United States sen Mulkey, ex-Unlted States senator, -n niir an n,,rrw- wn ator frora tnls "h" identified elected by Statement No. 1 pledges, and Penrose and Scott and Hevmen. into the Bank of Commerce thus cov ering up his tracks has been done by the adroit mind of Ellhu Root. Quoting this the World says: Mr. Root as secretary of state, deal ing solely with foreign relations, la rela- seated by the United States senate way and Guggenheim and Long and "",B",,'l";r,ruu,,' "'MU1 Ula Perkins and Flint and some others repute, holds In a written opinion Tf th nonnio nt thai totM . ..i.-i- PB' a.e Kaight whack at these corporation i.uaw, iTS tools, and were not too much intlmi- ced and corrupted, they ...e, - "ivianjr UUuuu would all soon be retired. -,.OUa v.uuiioco. v,. m. Who and what is Depew? When Idleman. ex-attorney-general of Ore- a brlgnt and rlsI man he - on and a lawyer of recognized abil- became a professlonal lobbyist for i ul Buu uieuges tne vanderbilts, and partly through are not unconstitutional, that they h,8 6ervices they plundered Negw aVe not affected bj the Dakota de- York state of property worth hun- waiuu .uu j, i-ue memuera cannot dreds of mimons of doiiars. The In honor withdraw from their prom- Vanderbilts rewarded him by making 1 ";,77 Vu T; tlm nominally president of the New ness man, high In the commercial York Central railroad at a high sal- life of the Btate, stands with these ary and finally dumped him in the VAII VnAVII I a WON nA I .... It tv V T .v senate to look out for their and al- - that It is the duty of the pledged iled interests there. When his first members to elect the man who-has term expired, Harriman forced Odell received the Indorsement of the peo- to send him back. He has never rep- ple for senator. Judge Stephen A. resented the people of New York In Lowell, one of the best known law- the senate any more than he has r'ep- yers in the state. In a letter to the resented the people of Tlmbuctoo. SThrtl h emphat,c 0 the contrary he has always repre- view that the high station of sena- Bentfd rnmnrnUnn tt. tor should not be reached "over a on plundering the people of that . pathway of broken promises and dis- state and the country. This has lwn ""7 . " uecmrea lnat bis lifelong work; he It had been made effective and now "should be obeyed." In its isolated contention, the in the publlo mind with Ryan's Infa mous system, This Is true enough, but It Is too much to hope that a New York leg islature will elect any man who will serve the people Instead of the trusts and corporations, unless it should be Roosevelt. DEVOURING BAD BOOKS 0 no knows other. It developed during the investiga tion of the insurance scandals that uepew was drawing thousands of r.t f 1 , I ""m viCBi"an oecame nope- dollars of the policy holders' money ess. It was useless to longer con- annually for doing tiothlng-a pure tinue IU Insistence that the State- graft, 0r to use an equivalent word, ment pledges are in themselves un- a theft. For awhile he was in such constitutional. So It has retreated disgrace that he went off and hid from that untenable position and but he gradually emerged, and now now gives battle from another. It has the effrontery to advise people says it is the compulsory statement that they should let the machine sys law passed by the people last June. tm of politics alone, and continue tnat the Dakota decision affects, tn ho fnninH -in. outer words, this statute," It says, "mases Statement No.-1- ob solete, supersedes it, completely an nuls it." It Is In this new point that the fine legal mind of the Oregonian shows to matchless advantage. Hold ing as it does that the compulsory statement is made unconstitutional bythe Dakota decision, it proceeds to contend that the-unconstltutional compulsory statement law supersedes and annuls the constitutional pri mary law and Statement No. 1. Will thepaper now kindly illuminate the method by which an unconstitutional law can. Invalidate a constitutional law? Might It not by the same luuuuuua process prove that the compulsory statement . law Invali dates the law of gravitation? him without making any effort to change conditions. The machine politicians in Oregon are welcome to Depew's public in dorsement, and whatever good it will do them. He says Senator Ful ton should have been returned, and that Depew says so Is a rerfson for presuming that the people did right last April when they rejected Fulton. Depew's indorsement should go far to damn any man politically. x RUEFISM . Of two members of the legislature la 1895 who did not vote for sena tor as they were expected to vote the Oregonian said: "They were nominated solely In consequence of pledges road by them and for them and they could not have been elected had It nqt been understood that they would carry out thj Intent and purpose Of the voters ofl Multnomah H A AS WAS ar by-product. He was the fruitage of Ruefism. His. family is the victim of Ruefism. It Is Ruefism to hold up and sack a city and then to hold up and confound the courts and law. It Is a reckless business that makes reckless men. It Is a violent "enter prise and its ' essential ultimate is violent conditions and violent Indi vidualism. "-' . From such conditions r Haases eventuate. Disordered , atmosphere makes "for disordered ' minds. Whether J Ruefism? directly ' encour aged Haas to fire on Heney or not, BSERVERS ARE concerned about the character of liter ature upon which the people are feeding. Booksellers de clare that nine tenths of the books sold are cheap fiction. The remain ing tenth is divided up between science, history and religious pub licatlons. The reports of libraries carry Information of similar Import. Many of the books of fiction sur vive for a year or less, after a wide sale, and pass out of recollection, never to be resurrected. A wise man said once that no book should be read until it had lived a year, and were this test applied many widely read publications would never be read at all. There is some comfort in the fact that it is the idle rlc.h that are the heaviest consumers of the trashy books. As do-nothings in the world, they seek diversion, and find It and nothing else In much of the latest fiction. Were they-the only buyers the concern of observers would be less keen. It Is because toilers and workers in all the ramifications of society feed on the dreams of an un real world, dealing with unreal possibilities, that causes regret. In finitely better for them and often quite as entertaining is an easy work on science or a popular philosophy of history. There is a world of meaning to be gleaned from a study of the races, peoples and govern ments of the past. This is - tre mendously true in a land where the citizen " Is sovereign and the future of his government a clear question of his information and Intelligence. We must have our diversions in reading, but there is as excellent al diversion and a far more profitable one in a real book that feeds us not altogether on thin air, but has a modicum of meat. common scold in the brick tower. Murder Is no cure for inlimtw ti, assassin of Heney has not accomplished anything for himself, his family or his race, flenev -will bn uhvaoii 1... umcia, uiu in me ena me law against debauchers of public servants will be enforced. Behind Joe Pn'nnnn hMaa tv. But behind him hides the Republican Senator Elklns thinks that Abnisil is a very fine man. hut h mm. t k favr ?.f turnlnB- over a few millions to an Italian nobleman. a a "Whoever heard before of an organised .jB.ai.iaitu akkCUIlDt I II inn ia m int " 1 men to break their promise and betray Ambassador Wu says more crimes are committed by meat eaters than by veg etarians. Yea but look how many .. iimu vegetarians mere It is reported that Mrs. Taft always bUVS her Ohrlntmna ", advance. Now here is a eood nunni. OREGON SIDELIGHTS. E. P. McCarnaek, near Salem, raised vsv.vuv pounas 01 prunes this year. , A man neap TtrnnVa hma that yielded J 00 bushels of potatoes to the i Z season. But ne cultivated M a Silver Lake Leader: Geese and ducks are COmina- In hv th thmumiili in consequence) the hunters come in luauea aown. a The RLALM FLMININLV The Too Thin One. FEW DAYS ago wa had advice to the too fat onk who. wants to grow thin. Now jiere is the word of an expert on the necessary process by which the too thin ono becomes fat. And most of us are the ono extreme or the other. Just mid- A' if I a v. 1 IX. , a. m i - ' 1. Tha Alhn t-. a. .--l"""" JUBC rigni dui now to ei a fruit Inspector for Linn county, ill" 10 eeP.ihat way 7 is right. Every western Oregon county! Have you never, as a child, amused needs a good fruit Inspector. ' j yourself by looking over a congreg- e I "on or people, (perhaps in long lioui It has hen Aamhnitnt.il . I of a church service) and wished von doubt that Klamath county can grow 1 7 them to alter like your paper dolls? ceiery we equal of any in the United I B'i,v Ver8. ana a 8Uce lnere- ln,a States, aava th TTamiA 1 v,ln has too Ions- a nose and that one's planted some as an experiment had a r?e?n2 BulL y.ou- Hero a P'ece c0ul,J fine crop. I be taken off in avoirdupois, and If it . 1 coma ne stucic onto the attentuated The R)lvr Tv T.... ..n. ... . I person yonder behuld what delightful bear atories, and savs that thr w m?10 never so many bear signs seen in the I unfortunately we cannot alter people woods as therai ban h..n thim n .k. 5 ik . " ";,, coins; uieraiiy covered The Orevnn A arliii been trvina- to main frm.n KJfirw"1 ..lnejL "houid arrow alfalfa. BO easllv. hue thApa ara nnrtaln nrln. flples underlying this matter of gaining- flesh which have thus been formu lated by a German professor of phys ical culture. . - The thin on), aoordtnar tn rtnrH no- must sleep from eight to 10 hours. Bulletin after bulletin ; ti. ,",""7 I -nrmg meais sne must ODserve peace ha.UbeTn UaSa-Sl ?' mJnd concentrate her atUntlon on appeared, which every fariT .m lofiL ,fn. .atlnfr- read. aih n.. a. I De tax en throuarh a atraw nrt ait th. thrrelTbemrb0 of each'taeal the thlnToSe 1. to for the entire vallev V-,VV, ."VT" lron " minutes, lying on a o al- Tea majority which Is only too glad to hide f ei "7 ,n8 woman soon to be "the first J- ne party is responsible for I ul lanu- -""", aaa as ion ir as ne la inutar the trUStS are nf -CinnA nA Dear old Joel Protect us from the peo ple And Joe does it and holds his job. a All this fuss in Germany tr n-vmr Iha emperor telling tbe truth and voicing reumiro.us. Wliai IS Tn6 US9 OT IjB. Ffhtf A??i1i0t",,s ln OBOh. especially . ...a.(ucrtt9 vniiey. are naaainir away. People are discovering- that th sect iiiuBuemy i anotner town, oountv nr c M M . 1. . . . ' - - ..vh ao Ruuu iur uieir own. TK' T T . 1 . aito iiuuiui iieogsr ooasts of a Ln "JJRPL'A ?."tyT -Better to tcHy. "XL VtV M'VJ 2 iua.Kna.iB ana eniov lire. ih. Tinit ca. t. -v..... .v. " " l" i-."- it ib tiuuw l tne same rw taa 4. ,..a ivr' vwiuh inco expression than is Billy of Berlin. Par- haps the two nations might swap dy nasUes with advantage. Lawyer Patrick's plea that in chang ing his sentence from electrocution to Imprisonment for 11 f ih. rr,vurnn. The vast tractn nt IH t,.i New York inflicted a mor uvar. n.n. land in the WIUamattA .-... I alty and thereby exceeded hl nnn.iit,.. attention. So do the prohibitive prices tlona powers, has more merit than when the would-be user asks. many, pleas ln defense of criminals. 1 When McTTinlAv ian fr n..0M.. .. . I a TAAn , , . - , .- jT ' , 4..wc..v um 1 n uuiiuaii scnooi proiessor ?f i,-4.'"?? th,PopPl were assured that says that an unmarried woman over free silver. Afte7 his election thi"5eat The" old ' ""K ."a!.r- . . 1 i . 1 , . - . I ... . . ' . . . w V".lll w nave pie were informed that they had in aorsea the gold standard. When Taft was running the people were assured that tbe tariff would he raving 0.1 now that he is elected we are beginning to realise that It will h nn in.i..n n? down. That the Democrats realised It be fore the election does not count, The Coos Bay eonntry neort. . n road and so does Tillamook It seems to hurt Harriman to build cross state roads anywhere. a 9 iso waterways appropriation," is tho III . . ; v..v l.Q C iiuriy 10 ao wnatever they like to him. One thing Is pretty sure that he isn't fit for a teacher himself. fruit .ectlon with Uu,...1 ff.h? ?1 any kind is allowed, but ell . . -w vw .v,o. I k 11111M rT unrArniAntAii rrtii iniAAaa iuo way 10 00 It Is not for one nnnniv 7. j ...i.r . . . 1 . , . " aione to develop apples, but for all if xoroiaaen. the countloa tit thJ. I .a.ADjr, i Thin women ar navMmiin.it, mm I j . . - , ......j l.mtii The nf f v. 1 lueiiueu vo wear a Drace or some coil- i ne past lew months have wltneaae.1 I trlvancn whlnh. urin hnM th. .v,.,i and orcha0rLm1hnny,t0(r,V, iar.se facts back, keep the chest up and Vate a who aS rntfbi,uLMJ?dford.t? Parties necessity for using the lungs to the thus afror2,P.latd. "ion th market, kitchens and at sewinT machines should . 7h..A. v lnuq nieuii weir one or mesa braces and try to na.011 JVLfilR open a. much. a. Q Vul iw,TZ.f ""k""""'"" uoiDiu- aimo, tivtm 11 ne necessary to wear warmer clothlngr- Professor Oerlina In sists that 1 11 n iflAlr .f .1. a 1. . Dairy corresnandenra ,n manafk t. I causa of much imnnnu mil ... iuwituiu. w ri&L countrv in tha 1 iiutai 1 y reanujiBiDia tor aunvAn .ahr caP. approach this in the h.nt nnH I hollows under the eyes, emaciated neck sublimity of Its mornings And evehlnrs? I and shoulders. To fill out the muscles in Bunrise ana sunset glow and the I l 'ne c'ieKs ne advises getting a small .no hub or inn inrrAim luutj auin uinwinff rnrniiffh it nva . . . tain slopes are spectacles for the Rods! Bl? times e. day for from two to four "UU"K in an nature Is so beautiful minutes, mnaung through the nose and mMi BenM of artistio taste in delicate I The corneUst, the trumpeter and the vuaui.uk. piayers or tne oooe and other wind in- a i sirumenis invariaDly have rosy cheeks "Uncle Rill" M I and well develoned r.haeV mnunloa . . .......... yjx WUJUB Will I T . T . . ' mane me annual banquet ln celebration I rruIWur. ueninger insists tnat any or nis eighty-fourth birthday this vear I wo,man wn? wul try this tube exercis a c t 4 .. . 1 Tn . . ...... . . - aiia.Hw iair, as usual. How ever he will iVa step further than ever before, mil not nnh roii. but also all widowers-Hn the town, are to tipuio in tne restivltles. and Mr Brown will present a fine hickory cane ii. L. woower wno marries after mo uig uirinaay ainner. a a Sheridan Sun Paiwtrl. . ,i ,a, 1. i i i . , , , ' t 1 ' . n iviunu i'j iiuiuHi wnu trespassing- upon nrl yaie property have reached this office this week. No efforts seem to have ueru uiHue nv ine mnn with th. to liauldate hist rininar. hill of the stock arowers ln thla vlHnitv are Justly lncenscid In ivmn.h,.. i careless automobile driver and a heed- ?s ijcihuh wnn a gun are two beings that need careful training in tfie eter- ihu iiLiieHB oi eartniy tnings. a a A man llvlnar On unnar PI.H. . . , r I - A.unuv oci a. trap iur a Dear, and n fr hn.i kicked ud ln that vlclnltv A. h-i to the spot, expecting to find a captive bear, but instead the trap was gone witn never a trace of which riirsr.tr. the nole and chain hA h.n a For more than an hour the trapper care fully searched the tnAiint..M. in .v.. belief that he would find clthnr th t j . , " " f"'s "r Dumc BiKn oi wnere it ft ad been dragged. Finally he turned his attention to the river and after some aiuuuao no nailed tne aeaa Drxiy or a biit bear, chain, note and nil fmm a -i Mllv tn th. .I,.a. and keep it up for a couple of months win oDiain the same results. First-class pay for first-glass FARMERS From tke St. Paul Pioneer-P; ress There arn mnnv fnfiir.atfr.ma v. n . v. -K"e. JPJV r.rom speaker last barrier which has hindered the en ------ -...I . . . v. .....no c. i. uiv Cannon. gon City made free. The way to do it to do It, and not wait on Joe Can non. There is no use. writing letters to the Republican members of congress, they are heiDlesa and mnm mtmrmA n Joe than a young Jackrabbit Is of a hun gry coyote. " Nebraska is Democratin in turtv the first time in mnnv vaara t.t ... hope It will prove to be so in fact and ln spirit. The charter board nut h uttia slow but It Is getting lots of free advice. If The Journal were a mere dem ocratic party organ it could desire nothing abetter than the success of tnose revolutionary, reactionary, rule-or-ruin Republitan politicians who are trying to buy off some Statement No. 1 members of the Oregon legislature. Nothing would so surely make Oregon a Democratic state for years to, come. But The Journal always puts the people ahead of party. ' " Editor Scott says he is riot a can didate .for Senator. Fulton refuse to say that he is a candidate. Then; Local Option and Temperance. - From the Boston Transcrlpt.1 President Eliot ln his remarkable speech to the annual conference of no- license workers ln this city, last night, set forth ln a few words the reasons for the success of Massachusetts legis lation regulating the liquor traffio and for the failure of statutes of other states more far-reaching as enactments to come up to the expectations of their promoters. The Massachusetts law is local option pure and simple. It leaves to cities and towns the question of de ciding for themselves whether the sa loon shall be operated within their lim its. It does not attempt to deal with every aspect of the liquor question at once and It affords an opportunity for men who use liquor ln moderation to vote that licenses shall not be granted If ln their opinion the public sale of Intoxicants would be detrimental to the Interests of their communities. Be cause it does not interfere with the private rights of Individuals In their own homes, because It in.. .t tempt to shut off the supply, as some southern statutes do, the regulation of the traffic ln communities Is easily ac complished along the lines of least re sistance. Such appear to be the grounds ox .rresiaent Eliot's preference for th Massachusetts law, and his belief that here, as elsewhere In the social economic field, our state has offered to the union a model worthy of their imitation. trance to the bright and capable man he college graduate or other upon agricultural pursuits Is orumbllna be fore the light of science and reason. That barrier is the low rata of wares wnicn custom and tradition have pre scrmea ror "farm hands." Frora Jl to J30 per month and board has long been considered ample pay ior tne most capable farm workers; tho higher figure representing the max imum which most owners nt forma nave been willing to concede to a man capable of taking charge of all the work and of carrying: It on in the own aosence. iteaaers will recall the elation that the Virginian, ln Wlsters novel, experienced at getting 140 month. Tet here was a man a type of nunareas of bright, energetic fellows wno, as the event proved, was not only capable of "running" a vast estate, as roreman of a large body of subordinates, but of carrying through large business projects of his own. A Job ln a de partraent store as head of a drrt. ment. or in a wholesome firm or bank, uoiiiaaurag an equivalent amount of energy and ability to that of Wlsters ranch roreman, carries a salary of say $200 to $360 a month. Why the su premely able agriculturist or rural man ager should be rated lower than these last has always been a difficult mat ter to explain. Also why the less bril liant man, worth $1,000 to $2,000 in city callings, could command not half as much on the farm. Probably the main reason has been that, under the methods prevailing be fore the adveat of "the new agricul tare," with its scientific pracUtloners, there lacked means, and opportunity for demonstrating to land-owners that the men were worth to them the larger pay. But today the demonstration Is being made easy. The graduate of one of our farm schools is showlp that h can take the farm vhm. .... iv. cheap help, clears only a b'gardly ' or n.wuo a year, and make it net rrom two to five times as much. auuoies or more than doubles his employer's income the latter has. nn ought to have, enough sense to that this student farmer is worth double or more than double the wares ha n.M ueiuro. une youna man mh. tract front $2,000 to $6,000 a vear nit or a small farm is golns to Inaugurat . i-utmy inaugurating an era. whn brains will be as fully recognised on ine rarm as In any city employment. aa w,n noi oniy earn as aood na hut no win demonstrate that he can get niiiniieiy more out of life. Not the least of the services whlrh rresiaent Roosevelt's commission on country lire will render will he th . ploitatlon It is giving to the fact that mere must be such a reorganization or agricultural Interests as shall nut the scientifically equipped "master of terming on a level In all respects wnn tne masters of any other ealllnn- As Profepsor Bartley says in the cur- fiii century, "agriculture miitl .1.. o meet the college man." That wav ies a larger prosperity for the land- wner than he has ever yet experienced, Andrew L. Harris' Birthday. Andrew Llntner Harris, the present governor of the state of Ohio, was born in Butler county. Ohio. NovmKr it 1835. He graduated from Miami uni versity ln 1860 and In the following year enllBted as private soldier in the Union army. He made a brilliant ca reer and was brevet brigadier-general when he was mustered out ln 1S65. He returned to Ohio and was admit to tn the bar. During 1866 and 1867 he Was state, senator and from 1875 to 1887 probate Judge. In 1892 he was elected lieutenant-governor of Ohio, when Mn. Klnley was elected governor. In 10B ho was elected lieutenant-governor for the third term and when nnvamn, t M. Pattison fled ln June 1906, Mr. Har ris became governor- for the term end ing in January, 1909. 1 Orchard Waste In Oregon. From the Grants Pass Outlook. It is a hopeful sign that the pro ducers of Oregon are waking; up to the possibilities of waste-saving. Probably nowhere in the United States has'there been such extensive and shameful waste of farm and orchard product as in this country In the past decades, excessive freight rates, scattered population and lack of decent wagotv roads have caused thousands of tons of marketable rmtt .to rot on the ground, while at the same time consumers ln mining, camps and remote non-producing- districts hove paia exnorhltant prices for canned goods. Today the cannery, the vinegar factory, tne rruit, evaporators and mo lasses factories are making a profit pos sible where before there was a disheart ening ioss. Among the benefactors as well as money-makers, ln Oregon la the near future will be the man who roost successfully solves the problem, of util ising by-products.-' Oregon will- tlvava hold an enviable position In the world's markets because of the offerings of high-grade fruits, but inevitably there win be only a limited upply of the top notch brand. Thero will be hundred of carloads of medium or low grade fruit produced which will not warrant the long haul to eastern, market. thi is the portion of the state's output that-j demands the attention of capital and of vuBiiiess sagacity. This Date in History. 1685 I. Verandrye, the discoverer of the northwest, was born at Three Rivers Quebec. ' 1734 Zenger. editor of a New York weekly Journal, was Imprisoned for de fending government by the people. 1788 Beth Boyden. distinguished Am- c...u inventor, was born In Foxboro ft?,fli-nDled near Newar. N. J., March Alt 1 14 0. i1i29ThT1Av!nt Qurr(r of Mexico, relinquished the extraordlnnrv Ma... a ana vi 1 " . " coneTess on account of the Spanish invasion. 1836 Governor Andrew L. Harris of '" "! ut-er county, Ohio. 1863 Battle of jCnoxvllle. Tenn 1874 Forty the sinking of tha packet Empire at New viacauB, i 1906 President Rooa-Tr.it .. n- . folon for Porto Rico after having m- Cristobal -"- " ""TU BM 107 Secretary Root' nnanaA th tral American Peace conference, ( L . ' , . Ai?"K,a county colt killed Itself .,T priillijf lie I (JO i ras Professor Gerllnsr who aops hunk to nature for his physical exercises, ho. iieves that the finest exercise to do found is the natural one tliitt panies an unembarrassed yawn. Tin; natural stretching of the muscles in the act or yawning brings every part of the anatomy Into play. It even itf fects ihe muscles of the earn, und the idea of relaxation and tension of tho muscles which underlies all the modefn fihysical - culture movements Is illu. rated here ln a natural and very con vincing way. Professor Gerllngs thin one must stretch herself with unre strained vigor several times a day. After that, any of the well known West Point exercises can be practised. t t H Ways With Parsnips. TO INSURE best results ln cooking parsnips, they should be fresh and crisp. These are some different wavs of servlna- this whnleanma vecetn- ble: Stewed Wash and scran th nr- nips; if of large size, halve or quarter them. Place two or three slices of fat salt pork ln the bottom of a stew ket tle. When these have become browned on one side, place the parsnips on top, season to taste with salt and pepper, then add half a nlnt of water. f'nvr closely so as to confine ail steam pos sible. If fresh parsnips are used, they should be done In 20 minutes. Send to table as hot as possible. Fried Cut the nrenared nft.rsjnfnn Intn thin slices lengthwise, roil ln beaten egg, then ln meal and fry brown in butter. Escalloped Take boiled and maahorl parsnips. Put a layer in a buttered puddina dish, then a laver of hrenri crumbs. Alternate these layers until the dish la full, cmmhsi halnv th. tnn layer. Place a few lumps of butter on p: add half a pint of cream or rich Uk, and bake half Sn hour. ParsniD Fritters . Tn halt a 'An boiled and mashed parsnips add two eggs, two tablespoonf uls of flour, and season to taste. Form into small flat cakes and brown in butter. steamed pia.ee the prepared parsnips a steamer, halvinar them if ta re cover closely and steam until tender and done: remove carefullv to a. hvin. 4t-U ...... 1 . ' . 1 - ' vi.oi, aim uiuwu ju a not oven; season to taste and pour melted butter over: send to table hot. Creamed Boiled , six medium alied parsnips until soft; drain and cut each through the middle lengthwise: In a saucepan heat two tablespoontils of milk and one of cream; . add seasoning to taste, also a small lump, of butter and sugar; wet a teaspoohful of corn starch In a tablespoonful of milk, thicken the mixture with this and pour U 5v.er the Parsnips while hot With Dumplings Half a pound of salt pork, two potatoes of good size, three large parsnips, three quarts of water, one tablespoonful of flour mixed half a cunful or water- n., ar.fl r tammtfl Cut the pork into thin strips, scrano ani slice the parsnips; boll the pork and parsnlns trentlv in the water n hn..-- add the thickening and salt and pepper ' and the potatoes sliced. Roll half an hour, then add riumnlfnc an kii ia minutes longer. around Its neck. fas in a rope For the Lunch Rot. OIL half a dozen eggs, putting them on in cold water. Cook for 15 min utes after the water reaches the boiling point. Rub the yolks to a pow-"fr-8J!d ,ttr ,nto them two teftsponnfuls Of fish Daste Or Dotted ham nr nr,o.,. and reduce with melted butter to con sistency of soft cheese. Chop tho whites fine; mix With this and spread all on thin bread and butter. Lobster or crab knrtwirhs. nr. ?ood and are made by mincing the meat Ine and maklncr it tn a nnata mitk onnalse. Spread on thin white buttered bread. Plain err sandwich mot, h-' 1 by chopping hard boiled eggs fine, the whites and the yolks together, soften ing with melted butter to a paste, sea soning with salt, nenner. nntnr. ..i. and a little dry mustard, and spreading on bread. Sardine sandwiches may be made like lobster nr Delicious sweet sandwiches are pre pared by mixing good Jam with cream cheese, softeninsr to a nat with nr and spreading; on thin white bread. Jelly sandwiches may be made ln the .yiy. or the Jelly may be spread on buttered bread. The Daily Menu. BREAKFAST. v . Apples. Rice and Cream. Kidney Saute. Hot Toast. Coffee ' LUNCHEON. Escal loped Tomatoes. Cold Baked Ham Junket Strawberry Preserves Wafers. Tea. DINNER. Cream ofjBarley Soup v Pot-Roast of Bsfef Wltlr Vegetable. -t a a B"Ht'1 Pren Peppers, Stuffed Lettuce With Mayonnaise. rh Chocolate Bread Pudding. Cheese. Black Coffee. Powell Rlltt nnraoamnnan .a' Bulletin: Everyone la T elated o4rTtne crops i raised tbe first year after wat"? wan deliver and a nr.. a . not.Pt'na.n.teLntext in the Fine of'-. Palf betV cabbage. onions and al- l? V