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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1908)
THE JOURNAL AK, INDEPENDENT RIWSPAPE. CL S. JACKSON .....PabUaber very muxur nomine ma X. tnir. flfta a4 V a Bib I II air ta. Portland. Or. Botcrod t the otd!c t PortUndOr or traittmiaalon through tfas mails fMscsBa-eus tnntfw. .-' " ' -' SEI.ePHONES MAIN T17S. BOMB. AU departments rearb.-d by theaa numb is. tH the operator tb department yo waai. Ent 61da afic. BX44; Kast 838. ' rPBBIOJI ADTEBTIS1N0 BEPBESENTATIVS Vixlund-Kinjiirnln Special AdertMn Afeser. Pmnawlck FdU4!ii, 22S Fifth iaTenoe, N L, ITork; 10073 Eoea Butldlmr. Chicago. nbarlrtloB Terras bjr mall e to any address IB Ul united states, cmuoa or . DAILY. On mar tS.OO 1 On anootb 8CS0AT. . . Dot rnr... 12.60 1 Ona monfli ...... ! DAILI AND B0XDAI. n yeani. .ST.S0 I 0e month OREGON'S NEED OF LEADERSHIP 0' Circulation Guaxanttt J"it CertiSe that ttt ejrcalttioa of t& " OBEaOH JCtTSITAX Bars toditfiaoSa gaarantttd by ibf Adrtrtiaer't Cenibed Cmvlatioa Bloe Bmok I It OMtn J Ctorafa1 TAa flu prortd by mmtuiatioa till tie areulauom record art kept with rare and tbt eimlatioa wtatcd with tuca aeemraey tbtt adrertiter may rtty en any atatemeatt at tame maot or rnr puomnen urnler the owoertaio aaa . a atatrmeau a under the .management September 1908. -3 A man's first care should 'be to escape the reproaches of bis own heart; his next, to escape the censures 'of , the world. Addison. V A COXVEXTION EXTRAORDINARY TODAY IN WASHINGTON a body ' of distinguished men Is delib erating. From its four corners the country has assembled. Its foremost statesmen and economist. It Is a convention made' extraord- lnary by the fame of. Its delegates. It Is equally extraordinary because of its purpose.4 The problem with which it is concerned is how to save 1 the remnant of our' national re sources from spoliation. The char acter of the assemblage is sufficient proot of the gravity of the. Issue. Save one, no convention of like char acter has preceded it in this coun try, That was the initial conven tion preliminary to the perfected as semblage of which this is the embod Iment. Involuntarily the convention of today recalls that other historic assemblage of That was a gathering of the republic's fathers. How to frame and1 launch a nation .was their problem. 1 They performed . their work welL They fashioned, and their model still lives. ' And like them, the fathers are again called into solemn council. " A remnant of the public resources has escaped the despoller. The forests have been felled until but 20 years or less of consumption remains. Ex cept the forest reserves most of the remnant left is owned by a few men. The nation's public lands have gone Into private ownership, some of it in great landed holdings, hostile to progress. The great oil fields have slipped completely into the hands of a single great corporation that levies toll on every unit in the re public. The uncovered coal beds have followed the forests, the oil and other resources , into monopolized ownership and the water powers are swiftly going the same way. To ar rest the trend and as far as possible save to the people that which Is left Is the occasion of the great assem blage at "Washington. How eminently fitting that this convention extraordinary should de liberate in the city of Washington! What Irony there is in the fact that its sittings are near the dOors of that congress to which, in the be ginning, the natlon'B resources were committed, resources which under congressional guardianship have been so wasted that to save the rem nant this -convention extraordinary Is assembled. REGON IS looting for a man. The man wanted must ... be a Republican. The tima Is ripe for such a man to rise to un disputed position of prominence and power. For such a man a position of unquestioned leadership is wak ing. There are a thousand good Re publicans In Oregon who can win the title. Any one of them can be of distinguished service to the state. He can be of distinguished service to trtsr partyr Tho-way ls wide open and the effort easy. The prize Is well worth the seeking. All that is required is devotion to truth and some of the intelligence essential to leadership. For him and his asso- elates there are careers to make Ore gon and Oregon conditions resplen dent. The Republican party of the state is in grave danger. False leaders are attempting to lead it into un worthy paths. They are steering it toward hidden reefs. They are at tmDtlns: to direct it through a course of perfidy. Foj- personal and selfish purposes they want to abol ish the primary law. They want the old regime of, conventions estab lished. They want to strip the elec torate of Its power and put that Dower in the hands of bosses. They are openly condemning the primary law. They are ready to plunge the stiletto into the initiative. Their power of personal control is gone and popular control has been sub stituted for it. It is' distasteful to them. It reduces them and their peculiar form of politics to the level of the other units la the electorate. To overthrow this popular plan and restore- the old Bourbon methods In Oregon is the program. It is a pro gram to which the Republican party cannot afford to be committed. It Is a DurDose that the people of the state will reslBt to the last ditch. Once a man has rights given him he Is not going to surrender them to be exercised by a politician. That is not the American citizen's way: This principle in human nature lsj with Its strain upon the 'eyes, body and nervous organization should be most entitled to Immunity from the the rock that will destroy any party JswIndler'B game. It was, however. that enters upon a policy of taking to the robbery of these that Von away from the Oregon people any of INelda addressed himself, the weak, the rijtbta they now have.1 It will the helpless and the aged alike. In destroy the Republican party of the every part of the country he pushed state Just as sure as death if ever the his , scheme, operating through a false leaders succeed in the present system of advertising and' the malls movement to commit their party to from Portland. The dollars of the the plan. The people will not give poor were beginning to pour into up that which has been given them his lap when the postal authorities and all the conspiracies in the back unraveled his scheme. , alleys and dark places bf Portland) Few instances of : fraud present cannot persuade, dupe or cajole them) features more culpable. - The strong into it. These people for known I intelligent man who is willing to and accepted reasons are going to re-(prey upon society in any avenue is COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE Henst ' , ,"- Chickens. .. i , , Ineubatora. Forty cent a doien. Carloads shipped in from the east . ... ,, -, " -. Shouldn't Oron peopl chant th!T Th poultry bulnes pay big- profits. - OREGON SIDELIGHTS.. The railroad having- been built there, Joaeph expect to become a favorite summer resort v Salem Statesman: ' For more and bet ter cows. That In the alosran In Ore gon. It 1 one of the grandest pros perity slogan ior tnis siate- This week saw the last of Albany's 5 Tie BXALM FEMININE. Gifts Made at Home. . . HERB 4s no time at which a girl's clever fingers count for. more than at the Christmas ' season. She who . can draw, paint, em - brolder, crochet knit, .sew, cook or do carpentry, never needs to spend Thousands of fbAnnl a an m sail ? m I t - . " ar r v niia.a BI 11 a tain control of the political affairs a public enemy. But when he flupes JUU" money at it . ivt. m i a . u I . , a . - I . .1. ........... i. m : ui iuio oittLtj ana ure guiug w uuiu i aiiu uecmvea .jsiruKgimg nuu ngeui Au between Castellan and r M desperately to every right. that has women his offense is' the extreme there is little choice. nagaa been guaranteed to them under re-1 limit of rascality. It is an offense I . on - un tomorrow the political lunacy and political suicide efforts to secure a compromise for to attempt to deprive them of these this offender ought not to succeed, things. - It will likewise be political lunacy and political suicide to any party that enters' upon a policy of corrupting men into renunciation of ante-election pledges as a first step In restoring the old political regime. The plan was tried, it failed -utterly THE BANK ROBBERY I ,mbJE?kaU th business that congress rlil do this month win h. n .u., x-eriiaos DT tha tlm. T IT . . - - .m.wvo doku ana r t, in and Madam . Stelnhell, Paris ....iiB uima enjoyment. Brother f!hn-l ! nniv'. t,.t Kt... How much would he hava li-uo oeen a wnoie brother 7 wnat nas become if FrnV fi - wi.v on n csniuaaie -lor spnntnr frnm vTw viuut ne nominate Roosevelt? What CasrellAna an r o.... uumjiBu mio n. steam laundr ROOSEVELT'S LATEST MESSAGE HE JOURNAL publishes the president's message in full to day. To those who read such documents it will be Interest ing. A brief summary of it will give little satisfaction. It contains suggestions that are x important Somewhat perfunctorily the. presi dent' writes first ' for the present, about existing conditions as to finance, foreign relations, etc.; but la his. lengthy discussion of the re lations of labor and capital and of the functions of the courts he writes for the future for Mr. Taft and his successors. Whether altogether right or not, his ideas are worth careful consideration. . ... The message is negahvely dra matic -that is, .it is unusual or nn- ..jcxpeclfid-in having nothing of . a "farewell" nature in it. it is the last of seven long annual messages, 3 et It contains no exordium or peror- j ation. It starts ot bluntly, and prosily about 'the country's finances ! and winds up without 6 word of; good-bye.' i ' N --.v.': -The topics that will be considered - i ol grcatestiintf rest j8d that Jia baa properly treated, at greatest length are the relations of labor and. capl-1 tal, corporations , (especially rail- sive. This is Indeed a great ana growing question, In a somewhat dif ferent aspect from that in which it came up years ago and one which requires wise statesmanship to han die to steer the ship of state care fullv between the rocks of state rights on one hand and the whirl pool of centralization on the other In spite of his disclaimers the presi dent Inclines very strongly toward centralization, but there is certainly need, as we have discovered In re cent years, of a central power over railroads and other corporations do ing an interstate business. The president's praise of his ad ministration practically of himself that runr, through the message, may not be in the utmost good taste, but we are used to his excessive egotism and pass it by, forgiving him gladly in consideration of the good he has done and the undoubtedly valuable services he has rendered. He is a man and his is an admin istration of many very large flaws, of remarkable perversities; yet on the whole he has been a mighty force for good in this country. THE GRANGE AND MR. HAWLEY M roads) and the supremacy of federal Tower.-. Tq this latter togic he de- ' t-t a-rout-Movable part of the mes- "i'nl he otUcntly'. desires "to ' 5 '"f I-'- "t an:! lr-res-Jor nouo at all. In politics? APLE LANE GRANGE is per fectly right in its conclu sions. ' One question it asked of Congressman Hawley was: "If yoil had signed Statement No. 1 and had been elected to the legislative assembly, would you break your promise because the people did not choose your candidate?" The other question was: "Do you counte nance, advise or approve the effort being made to induce any of these members to violate their Statement No. 1 agreement?" Otherwise stated, all Mr. Hawley was asked in the first question was: "Do you advocate the keeping, and S.0 you yourself keep, ante-election pledges?" Why hesitate to answer that question? As ex-president of a noble educational institution, an institution recognized as a leader in the moral and Intellectual uplift Of Oregon, what else but an emphatic "yes" was to have been expected from Mr. Hawley? What Is It when a congressman from Oregon, rep resenting a district at Washington, will not tell his own constituents that a promise Is a promise and ought to be kept? Otherwise stated, the second ques tion is, "Do you countenance the effort now going on to lead members-elect to perjure themselves?" Does Mr. Hawley advise perjury or does he advise truth? He refuses to say which he advises. He refuses to tell his own constituents which course h counsels. Though he is their public servant, and they Ms constituents, they , cannpt find put whether he, is for truth or against truth, whether he believes promises ought to-be kept or broken. . "He that is not for me is against me." runs " a well-known injunction In Mr. Hawley's Bible. Mr. Haw ley knows who uttered that sen tence. It was the utterance of him who was the incarnation of 1 truth, and was crucified on a cross for trnth'a sake. Is it stlll trus as it was then, . that : he who is ot lot truth Is against it?- I it still true as it was In Christ's ti mo that there should be exercise of conscience alike in private life- and public life? i Or is it now, the fashion to have one conscience for private life out an entirely new and different one. Such Is T WAS impossible for the police fiot six feet by two. ui rurnaiiu tu ut&vcs ukjxz la. ju. i ' 1 nvtv a 'avnaAin'ai . - guard constantly at the East Side ooo.ooo a mSntb. ' No wonder h like Dank, it is impossiDie ior tne i government. , uci uau a teuiurj u,i inai auu uasipoiice OI romana to oo everjwuers ITnlonai at vt-ii Vt"j i, . .nnn tvAm. f I j .u u . I ..v '."JIU. mioim uwu imivitu uus mi mm, nuiu uuguaru uih iu mm Mpouw nu- pvuiu uiaintain ninasei;. in luxury now in use. in tne citv limits. It is notorious r i vt uca. It is in this Juncture that there that American cities are woefully in is a matchless opportunity for Re- adequate In their patrol service as publican leadership. The Repub- compared with cities beyond the At- lican masses are looking for a man. lantic. We have been, through the They want one, or they want many. 1 129 years of our national life, a,dem They want men who will go to the ocratlc commonwealth, seeing with firing line, stand up for the right, broad horizons and trustful of pur battle for the truths avow devotion, fellow man. We have not yet to a promise, be as true to their word learned the distrust of the race that after as before election, defend the in Europe regards every man as a people in the possession of their new criminal until he proves himself and run through It tben burn or sin rights and lead their party in paths otherwise. Our people, criminal and luo """""v. of honor and sanity. It is a pro- uncrimlnal alike, go about by day It is none too early to make one New gram without one spot of weakness, and night without that rigid survell- "8,u"on "ov and begin to i io o ytaix wui iuj ul iuo uuuitrsi ul mute iua. nuvno iu uiuijo ihh uwooiwiq vuiy KJiCKiia prOaUCtfl. loniifsrs It fa a nlan ttisif will hr.ntr I mnromont rt ovarT itTiPftsf AlntriiAfl I '' - to Republican leaders who champion stranger, where he slept, where he L boWi ble'DemocrVuo 'tSS li nepuoiican masses oy us less oiiuiueu.'on wuai train u-o ut-yaricui lvl OI ucKer it taice the Ke- thousanda. It t a chnrarter of lend, nnrl to what dfRt.lnatiow lie our- '"T"" oi uregon to De. ciduijj iuai win quium dcuu i.uubc tuusou a u. qjvu. puncn- Anurpw Carnegie says jie got - his false leaders who oppose it into a lance In Europe is the product of au-J',ri8t aving it He might discomfited and unresurrectlble ob- tocracy and is an Instrumentality for Hons bv hlnfi .Vh0"1 h,,m1.1; ' . . preservation of kingly , rule. It is swindle the American people out of also the product, Jointly with the! the effect of the quefles Maple Lane autocratic system, of the lower order I " all the newspaper men who don't 1 1 Ar K nn ttf imt nrda that T AnaA.Ala 1 . . A a - a Grange has placed before Mr. Haw- of population due to the Impover- infallible, in ewrything, mrl WrVVcouti ley. As a Christian gentleman with ished conditons In which fhe mutti- ,r'elH; rascals, shouldn't he be made na- apparent capabilities of upright po- tude of European peasantry exist litlcal leadership and exemplified We have passed the century mark civic rightepusness, Mr. Hawley in our national life under widely .1 1 J V. t 1 . 1 I ,7i..AMnnA .nnlnl cmA Annrimftf. nrn suuum uetuLic ct real ltauer uy uuraou smioi vuuvwiv vuu- uumo, is continually scold In g him bravely stating the truth that must ditions with the result that we are -aiSfV.Jiaht ' h ?Mdn' bS be within him. By his past life noth- not all catalogued and not all,; nor that he couldn't see her mSfioni? tl ing less was expected of Congress- any of us, the subjects of constant I w" JfT ort of coldrngJ man nawiey. eni;iuuage. vuir yvixv Bjoivuia nuu patrol service are tnerefore far lessi a man having. aused his wife's ar- THE PRIVATE SCHOOLS comprenensive tnan m iiiuropean poVket Fhe ludie id t hfm- E i" capital, uernu uaa uiuio mau uuu-1 you wno ar to blame. Treat your wife livion. censor for 11 fo after t tonal press marcQ t i A New Jersey man Is asklner for ill. vorce because his wife. ?hn ...r and. dumb, is contlnuaUy scold In ir him T HE JOURNAL does not agree ble the patrol service of Chicago in one wim speaKers at ine local iin- Fut""u . iui""o"uu .. i Hnomy or your pocKetnooK wm be isterial association yesterday Chicago is the fest place of all the ffksP-' There tktoo .y; "J'S wno snecesrf'fi mannnnmpnt nr criminal ui me wunu. s i ay- custoaians or tne ramtiv nronairtv. an,t private Institutions of education, proaching the period, if indeed it is uBie.sh.to-wivs. &"E3 The private school and the denom- not already here, when pur police so-cent pieces, or-not at all. Never come inatlonal college have their place in must be multiplied so that their ef- XuintC2gain"mThTsUi. Wrightn the educational system. Once they fectiveness may be accentuated. The many cases, but suppose wife in- were the nnlv inqtrnmpntnntio. nf influx of criminals driven from in- J"?. fn penaing more than a tnan can : . i . . . . . , . imajtoi instruction. Even with our vast and nospnaDie Europe is one reason, ana comprehensive system of public edu- there are others, cation they still have their field and their usefulness. They appeal to Stfll another grange organization sections and strata in the hodv has arisen for defense. In this issue . h. .,.,u wlth tooled edge and the title neatly .Inrt Stif. 22 done. But if you cannot bind book and x.600,000 salmon eggs 8tla want t0 maka leather cover, try m that 7mlr ti ii n f tna . t . . . . .r old horse car service, and soon the buzs I v. juab,. t, ' ,. -hnn -winXn-m. of th trolley will be heard, something nVZt5 Ef h. --in . hi -m,.inma nrnvMnaiva I and wondering what she . can , buy to aten of lmnnrtnnne. Ravi tha Democrat I Please ner mends. -- .-,. . . . I uvttuier is one or tne articles wnicn Petty' thieves have been operating In I has been much misused. - Ther Is no Toledo lately. Many have reported loss I particular reason why it should be cut or cnicKens, cannea iruus, ic. wtunio strips and woven into a pillow noie me sneaxa will soon ue iiueu imnicovpr Thawmit Km.nH tn vo d."5h,at can publish their names, 1 gruous, becausa there is an apparent. ay vn Jeaaor. i I effOPt to nubi a fnanw .rtlrla nut. rt m. CnrveHtm Tim.. : r t t kt Uoii I stout and wear ' resisting substance. In his Thankaelvino- sermon tiresfrihpfl Neither is it appropriate for hanglnar On singing as tne panacea tor ail lamny I v'" umay uuea iduuws as Uls. Now no one sings for fear th decoration, v It i a good material for neighbors will think some. family dlffl-j belts, but not for collars, suitable for cully Das arisen, ' -." .. . I ouHB ue, dui noi ior posiai caras. - , w : - rftiiu u n you are planning io mua a A nonpartisan, nonsectarlan club for noimoy gin irom jeatner consiaer wen Medford now seem an assured fact. To w. u" article will be put to. An date 105 buainess men of th city have leather cushion, laced together, la a signed a roll signifying their willing- 5d an1 "nslble gift for a man room, nes to become a member and pledging a .college boy, particularly, who 130 a tli initiation fee, . want only substantial articles. But I. . . n . l.l . 4 .. i . . . 1 . . . . . adoption of more intensified method f i . Ah i. . i-iki. ?LtJ?nyiJiCr?'l''?2 bu"lne8S for moving the ordlnar pasteboard cover . . . - i ami euostitutinar a son leatner cover Th suoerlntende hatpherv- took l.l 2.u.?" r.i".up.l'?s 5 VrLn1.uiS yor hand at a magazine cover, which . " ' rnay De mad or leather mounted these were chlnooks. He jexteots to I .n.nnx.i.r .v.n.. ... . i .1.1. . .1, 1 1 I awu iiaYiiiK B ' V i'i.""?,' " u"'-'1 "vr " I "trip or leather t3 pass through the several months old. - , , center of the xnaKasfna to hold It In There ar in town this ' week 11 1 P e'oii k f..ih.'. freight team from Sliver Lake, mostly I tractive bag If cut In bold form and ifwk . m"' r,,,a W1U pJa.eun mounted upon & soft silk matching of with potatoes and flour principally for contrasting color. Let the leather form consumption In Lake county, says the the bottom and most of the side of riiiivTiiM nvricw. iiict bic un v i UK i rn. nil tr nnvuVA, nnra v n.h a a w. . cash for everything1 end doing a bl daillon or an annlimi nmim.m it i. ouBiness wun rrmeyiue mercnants. I effective. Neat little frame can b , - . .. , - imaae or it. nor a neeaiebook It la Burns Times Herald: It Is honed I nrtrv n r. tnr ..i..nr. n that Harney countv mar receive some I rUa nr n . nnvM-in. . .Au. iU i vui auveiuiiieiii.. in t.ii way i cuir oox or bag it is suitable and pretty. dry land farming. It has th largest v level body of agricultural land in the The uses of cretonne ar so numerous state and in its present undeveloped that one could make th whol list of condition an experiment farm would dainty personal present to friend wlth- ua ui arrai pviiftuc io ine .manr new i our nvpriiAnn its dnm, n t i. nut people now settling on government land, expensive, and it has been so beautiful . idealised, on might ay that It Is A Kuarn aHornatlnaV onrran mnaratni. apprODriate for manv uses from whlfh which will adik 750 horse power, 2300 Jt JB previously been ruled out. vdlts and HI amperes to their ores- f ind or make a pasteboard box large ent plant has arrived for th Conder fnough to permit three other boxes to Water & Power company, and will be oexutea into it wnen it is turned on Installed In the near future, says the end. Cover th small boxes, which Gold Hill- News. The hug generator should be about four inches squar and weighs over 30 tons and a mile of rope on ,ncn- nifth. with a smooth piece of beltlnir will be usp,t to connect It un cretonne and line them Inside with with th Rogue. smooth paper. Olue a bit of ribbon to . l eacn rront, to nerve as nandle.,. Cover The erat of small farmlna- tracts tne 'arK hoi. Into which they fit. wth seems to, be upon us in Polk county and cretonne, with a rosette of ribbon. If fnr that taft tvo 'shnnlri nntihilut. hyOU like. UDOn th tOt. Into the little ourselves, for it means also an era of DOJ5 put button, pins, needles, spools, Increasing prosperity In the county. 1 u'mr .uu""."l,,or. wnaiever you wian, says the Dallas Observer. In a score but, since this) Is It purpose, each of places holders of lare farms have kln2 ,, separate box. Thi make a ih.in ni.nt nIUseful little adiunct to the sewlrw room from 10 to 40 acre and are offering or iha',b2"do,rf n1 ,?a,ve time required mem ior saie. - i vv : , W.-v thch moy i wmu. w ay noi a preiiy lea cosy ior A Dalles man wa looking after th- 0"J ,aav '"f1"". "' the poultry at his plac on Mill creek near J"" TVrueKi?epri' "lne ror that mat- the city limits when he encountered a r7 ,why should our English cousins wild mountain cat in the poultry house ?ver. f1" !jave a monopoly of the He wa fattening about a dozen roosters usru' e.a 50ZTT ... ' ... under the barn when he found the whole J:,K'i ,w" w"'5n"' c"1 wun . lot dead. A wild cat Jumped out -and :'"H",gtw escaped. Not for mny years has one " l"?A ou". V !,T"e , of these animals ben seen in or near f,0"," ,a,2l qu'"eA "At,n. "ch. thatt r tV 1 aiiitiin; tua io RUUU i"7 ' miss tnotner worK pr first year, make a retty work basket for her own. Make of Klamath county awaken to the value hn ni L;2i, of the hill lands for the raising of ,Tnut liLwe if, ii,f v. th. Hamiii Tt h. TwAn I basket during h . -. J . . " 1 nfftttV wnvU Kl..a( Km nnrn u.b. parties rammar with rrutt r. ,i .U . . V; v . h thta mnntv Vina inrira areq. 11 plain and neat, and put Into tt plenty JUs onTaclf side of tts' ?LbW"0 ,yi&"'JI- stated by raising that Rlnns: th hill ley.,whero fruit could be grown with success on account of its protection from frosts, - , FAMOUS GEMS OF PROSE politic that public institutions do not the Linn County council Patrons of reach. Thtm ara rtonr.mfnnHnr.oiJ Husbandry, scores the Insurrection-1 (From an address before the rraduat- uta whA nf.r ,hot hi. a lata who B(k to set aside the ballot I !n -ofth Tale law School at .v. . puuo "v. j i--- ------ INew Haven, June 16. 1899.) aaugnters be, educated in Institutions pox ana suDsiitute s personal pro- Gentlemen of th graduating class of under the care of the church. It is gram rule, it is anomer rumDimgith xai law school: I commend to you in cultivation or a spirit tnat win en able you to tak a healthy, sound and cheerful view of th .struggle' and movements of society, of law and of government believing that their ten dency 1. toward Improvement not de terioration. I would wish you to real ize and appreciate th human dlrec- "The Ideal Lawyer" By John W. Grigffs Son of several slses. an emery, needles. darners, dammar cotton, marking ini tials. She will have cause to remember you gratefully. a heart preference, and the heart from the foundations. preferences of the world are worthy of consideration. Thev hav an on- ' This Date to Hfartpry. vironment that many prefer ta those "5 Ell ,WhUr.ey. Inventor r th t- . ii- , ... I, ,j cotton gin, born at westboro, Mass. i the public institutions. Besides jjled jeV Haven, Conn., January , 1825. there are pupils and students whose ms A British squadron sailed into nervous and mental organization are Narragansett bay, and took possession tlon in which recent reforms of Jurls- such that thn hrlvntn lntit..tinn ta of Khod Island. - ' ' ' x;,- prudenc have been progressing and to wtL tZt 11 , Institution is 179aHeanr Laurens. South Carolina 6 t0 lt tnat mo & you can aid, better for them. In such institutions statesman, died in Charleston. Born thd spirit of mercifulness shall not be there is usually opportunity for bet- ther In 1724. - ' . suffered to decline. The further matn- ter and closer contact between in- I8l0Ellhu Burrltt originator ofr the tinJince cf th high authority and r- strnctor nd Inarms That lnternatlonal B.eaoe mJ?v.e,m!ebo,Je P of our Anglo-Saxon Jurisprudence V " , 7 i a Nevr Britain, conn, iieu iuor. i th foundation of our progress and ov'"tl wumvi. io uncu b tiiuuuuucuu a, i7. 'J.',.m ' . . I prosperity " and the safeguard or our and most desirable factor in the 1848 First deposit of California rold liberties is Intrusted to th bar. The course of training. It is in the case In United States mint 1867 Father Theobald Matthw. . fa- world will judg of th system accord- Q ,r ,v . . ' . r, . ling io in manner in wnicn us minis- of many of the instructed much to mou. temperance apostle, died. i te, aamtnlster Jt. Beyond hi imme- be sought. It is an influence in I is2 General Grant ordered Generally,.,. .,, vi. ,. i... .which there is a preservation of the Sherman to adyancen 'f 1.1, I has a larger and wider spher of duty relations of the family circle, a re- Ror jlrmarr Ti is29 t0,tne ? .l? . ,"utr",nf' uPPor"K . t. v, . i-.ail. i Born January zi. 1 and maintaining the priceless value of lation impossible In the institutions " that .v.t,m ofiaw and tustic which of great enrollment. - Robert Collyer's Birthday. 1 1 th heritage of th American people. A further fact of strong emphasis Dr. Robert Collyer, th famous uni-i th character of th member of that for maintenance of the private edu- r'an 1 ?1"ymanVwt Jf"1 e'L; pIofe?,?r if wSfw 'rVil!: catlonal agencies la that they are maa' he learned blacksmith trad, which 1 of publlo off ic and general publio sen one more instrumentality for spread- he followed . after coming to ' America j timent continue upon lines of Justice, lng the gospel of learning. There ,n 185- A few yars iatr n icam a safety and oonserv&tlsm. cannot be too manv avennea tit In. Methodist preacher. H changed to th Bo I urge you not to strlv excluslve- cannot De too many avenues 0T In- Unltarlan denomination In 1859 and en- ly for th pecuniary reward . of your structlon. There Is no peril from gaged In missionary work In Chicago, profession, but to -look forward to a a widely educated generation, espe- From I860 to 1879 he was pastor of the career of influence and usefulness that daily in a free government The Unltv church in Chicago, of which he 8hall Include your neighborhood, your , i ,i. .... . was also the founder. His fame as a Btata, your country, within its beneficial average unit is the standard of what or tor spread and in 187 b wa L.h n- ....t mtnni. it mnm. the nation will be. If that average called to the Church of the Messiah in mena th ideal of th g-ood lawyer I unit be uplifted In mental polish in- New ork c,ty with which h ha ever do ot say tb great, but th good stead of incapacitated by mental ."LfrT !awJn-L5eaA " n . , . , , . f". " m l in in lira OI every luuawnuai cny ana rudeness, the conditions of social and collyer. in addition to his pulpit duties, I OIlrt MM(!,U. n th older neia-hbor- economic life will be correspondingly was prominent on the lecture platform 1 nofdi. a mBn a kindly and benignant effective and delightful. There is ,u .Vr 1 ,1 , I disposition, frionaiy ana wun ni wen Vwn9 - i tn no ana nis coorer l euuw iuw numen. terests of his town, his state and his Probably von know. too. that a bride never has a clothesnln bag and would appreciate such a simple homely gift. Have the draw string long and loose, so that it work easily. . A recipe book I something that every housekeeper appreciates. If you wish to take & little trouble, go to different friends and get their favorite recipes every consideration for fostering all the means of education, especially the private establishments which have their rightful place In Boclety for the very good reason, if for no A Law of Honor. From the Hood River New Letter (Rep.). - f. These men know that ther is not a word of ."law" in Oregon on tho uues- acqualnted with their habits and Indlv ual history, and with a pretty accur ate notion of their opinions and pre judices a well a of their way and means; genial ana sociawe. yet aignl- fied and seif-containea; or -staia ana Other, that they pay for it and cost tlon as to whom the legislature shall I comfortable appearance: . in : manner the public nothing. I THE SWIXDLIXG CASE T IS a matter of coneratulatlnn that there has been swift detec tion of the Von.Neida get-rlch-quick scheme. The courts should be as swift in meeting their respon sibilities as the .postal authorities have been in theirs. The scheme was directed to swindling those whose poverty should have saved them from robberyv Needy and aged women were Von Xelda's vic tims. He held out to them the hope of earning a wage with the needle. Of all who toll those tfhose tool of activity is tta ; ' wearfsonie necdlo elect JJnlted State senator. But ther f alert; in conversation always moderate is a law of honor and a majority of land respectful; shrewd In hi observa the members of th legislature solemnly J tlons; wise, but W'th-peresnlal humor pledged themselves to vote for th peo-jnd love, of pleasantry; as a cltlsen al ple's choice. They should now u fulfil j ways concerned and active in . th ln- thclr contract or bring infamy upon petual fAUlt-flnder. nor giving ut th i'rJJ-a.ft? .h" .Wrt t "T Intimation that he Is better or wiser 0r paste them into the book, which than others; but ready to confer, to should have many blank: leaves for fu- adjust, . to agree, to get the best poa- ture editions. Bind It In strong dark slble If not the utmost that Is desirable; paper, or, better still, In oilcloth, and to him the people turn In local emer- Fvovi$? anln pKat JV1-? -. " gencle. for urdaUc and counsel on tefephon.b dU-'ectory"1081 " ften their public affairs, even partisanship And this Is but the beginning of the fearing not to trust to his honor and dainty attractive gifts that can be made wisdom; so free from an cause of of. " imie time ana patience. Once fan., th.t ti. .... la no tnnn,, n lr I th home made ChrlStmRS ttreiUtnt WIM word against his pure Integrity too Sfr.8!?."!,, fukvln',fi-.?0,mw,rt 2f 4amifM .n -.nJ.ti ' . '""V8.!. b.v .h Klflwho made r.. - k--- w iM.n(f nersoir insteaa or buying them mlllarlty; too genial and geneYous to but this Is not so now. We recognise provoke envy or jealousy; revered by that the personally made gift Is far his brethren of the bar; helpful and mo expensive of our friend's thought kindly to the young-. In manner suave Wl '"'""k any r,eady. bought and polit. with a fine courtliness ot "J,5ould be- ttn" we welcome it the old flavor what Clarendon de- at St K scribed In John Hampden as "a flowing j 0 Make Kev Pit courtesy toward all men; successful, of 1,.. ... r , . ' course, in hi practice, but caring less I7 , , ' convenlent ke for Its profits than for the forensic and W ,ock apart in the event Of keys intellectual delight which the studyand being lost, stolen or missing practice of th law bring to him; he when you wish to fit a new key take know much 'of the old "learning In the ?i. ,lKhteJ, matcb or candle and smoke law" can tell you of fines, of doubl i5?,fww kL,nv, "I8 lame introduce it vouchers and recovrles, of in. "rule In f"tga rTstnhehopo Shell,'. case-though he keeps. .11 these Jcfc withdraw ffandsTdenUtioSs things In mind as collector treasure In the smoked part of the key will their antiques and curious, more as ob- show you exactly where to file. jects of art and historical Interest than of practical -utility. St K K A Table of Weight. THREE level coffeecups of sifted flour equal one pound." Two level coffeecups of pulver- ied sugar equal one pound. vine ana one-nan level correecuca , His mtnd is grounded upon the broad and deep principles of .jurisprudence rather than upon "wise and modern in stances; but over all Is reflected the illumination of a stroiflfrcommon sense and a refined tactfulness. To hi. clients granulad sneTr e'ouaTne EES? n is an object of confidence and Teal One, Two. Three, Four Cake One cup affection; th secure depository of fam batter, two oups sifgaiy three cups flour, Uy secret and the safe guide and Jour??s one CUP mllk,Hwo teaspoon- counseiior in trouble and difficulty;, lu puwuer. comDoslnar. not stlrrlria nn rif h., I St S 9t When in actual trial strong, aggressive,! Tn Iily Bfenn. confident: never oulbbllnar or dlaaam. BrtEiHPART bllng; respectful to witnesses, to Jurors I Cereal with steamed dates, and cream ana ,to juage. as wen as to bis adver.r un vyuoi w wwi sary. . In the judgment and feel Ins: of th community there I something of the venerable . and illustrious attached to his name; not for his learning in the law nor for his success a . an advo cate, nor for his usefulness to his fel low cltlsen as a counsellor and amide. but for the benignant Influence of his whole life and character; and when he aies to every mina there comes a-sug gestion of th epitaph that ahall most fittingly preserve the estimate which the people have formed of him "The! just man and th counsellor." - themselves and upon the state. Mr. Carnegie's Great Service. From the New York World. . Mr. Carnegi ha struck tha mot ef fective blow yet delivered In behalf of an honest revision of the 'tariff. . Standpatters may scoff at him as the chief beneficiary of the protect! sys tem, but he Is an expert witness whose testimony is certain, to have its inriu enc upon" congress. .' Nobody can "deny that Mr. Carnegie -know what h Is talktng aboutwhen h says: JToday fle f.rnanufactttrer need- no protection. V .. ' . , . "Steel I now prodMCed cheaper hrr than .iU U ljr9 fclo, uot itlif tandlng the hlsrher waa-e paid per man. '"Not a ton. of steel I produced in th world at as small an outlay for la bor a's In our "own country. 1 "Th day is past when any foreign country can seriously affect our steel manufacturers, tariff or no tariff.? - iir. Carnegi is writing as a protec tionist "ot' a a free-trader or an. ad vocate. of a tariff for revenue only. Hi own view ar the view that he credit to a majority of the American jepl! "First That it Is advisable for new countries' to- eneourage -capital by pror tectiv duties when seen to be necea- f-sary to develop new liltlustrlfs. ' , "Seconrtt That after f ult and" ehais tive trialtf, after success V finally at tained, such protection should cease, ex cept as noted. - ; "Third That 'Should the experiment succeed, protection becomes unnecessary and should steadily but gradually be abolished, provided that th home sup ply Of any article absolutely necessary for th national safety shall not there by be endangered." ,v ,( . Ther can , be no i honest proteetlon which I not in accordance with those principles, and her tan be bo satlsfac. tory revision -of the tariff which does not apply those principles to th plng ley schedules. - " Mr. Carnegi can render noS greater service fft "the Amrtran. poojiJe thsnt lead the fight for true tsrlff reform. Cofffle LUNCHEON. Deviled kidneys Boiled rle Cream cheese sandwiches - Apple Sauce Tea ' DINNER. .-' Chicken gumbo -soup Flank steak stuffed and browned Celery Rlrje olives Macaroni and cheese. Lettuce, French dressing Prune Whip Sponge cake - ; lack coffee - The Jury's VerdictwO , From the Kansas City Star- A South Missouri man recently was tried on a charge of assault The state brought Into court as the weapons used a rail, an axe, a pair of tonga a saw and a rifle. Th defendant counsel exhib ited as the other - man' weapons - a scythe blade, a .pitchfork, a pistol and a hoe. " The Jury's verdict Is cald to hav benr 'Resolved. ; -..That - K9.,.fJ) Jury 1 would have given a dollar to have aen the -ffghf - -; -; -;:.? : "V Premature Rejoicing.: . Front; th at Ijouls -Post-Dlspateh. ' People Who are talking about Mr, Roosevelt' "final message," now in preparation forget that he flabbergast- J, ed conpres with several 80,000 word ' i eomrniini&tion betweea. last November and Starch.