I I I I I 111 I i . up li P MP mmi mil m i m EDITOEDffi EiOE OP T! m "Tl C THE JOURNAL 1 tRDBrCMPINT VBWtPAPIB. C S. JACK BOW ithn.J Mr titalu laaceot NliTl ran Sandar xtfolu at TW Jmu! BbIM- las, rtfU aad KaartlU arraai I. IMrUaa. Ur, hkj k. HatartVa at farilaBd. Or.. biiMkikt larsuk 'A mU amaj-claaa rtMirnoKti-main Tin. noun, a-som. ill AmnaMi Ttehti fcr tbaae aowba T.U tka apart tuf tkt oapertamt yea . .1" rotUQM aDVBBTlSISO BBMSSCWTATITB. '"'via gntnor C.. reaawlc Sanding. t2S rim avaaaa. Hre- Tort; IOUT-0 aoa ' Salldlac. rlcra. - r - Tea Imrul la am fll Is len. Begtaad. ' at tae afftce ef Tha Jnoraal'a rnrttah nvm aaaUtlraa. H. A J. Hrtfy A Ca. M rtmt rtrwt. vkm rabarrlpUooa anS drrrtlaaraMta VIII he raotfrad. fers to put on an exclusive mall and baggaga train, carrying no passen (era, and to reduce the time many houra between Chicago and Lob An geles, and tha northern roads aro also contesting eagerly for thla prize. That It is a rich ont Is tbua proven; the government In extremely liberal .01 pr cent. Ths dumber of re- llgioua denominations la the United State. i glveo aa Jg, with HJ.JJO local rellgloua ' organisations, tl,- 936, Ut church tnembera, and 1. 257.576,867 inveated In church edifices. The niimbor of organizations of with the railroads In the matter of the principal sects In 1906 are siren carrying malls There 1b always a as follows: Methodlsta,' 64,701; big deficit In the poHtoffleo depart- Baptists, 64,880; Presbyterians, ment, but nobody ever seems to 15,506; Lutherans, 12,703; Roman think of economizing by cutting the Catholics, 11.482; , Disciples, or cost of carrying the malls down to Christians, 10,942; Episcopalians, reasonable flgurea. (a asy aaaraea Masloai Snlavripttna Terms wilt a S tka Culu Sutea. Canada i ruar. (M rt.'.....$B OS f t)Tt BOOttl I M r SCNDAT. aa rr ,... I 0a axmt I JB DAILY AKD SCKPAT. One (war gf-SO I One month S .S3 9 No liberal man would 1m ..pute n charge of unsteadl nesa to another for having changed his opinion. Cicero.' T 6845; Congregatlonsllata, B71J; Tnlted Brethren, 4804; Evangelical Association, Z7S8; Keforined. 2585; AdventlHts, 2561; Jewish, 1700. Vet of the total number of members re- matter "money talks," h .proposes that 1150,000 b raised hers, to be stow in prizes', as an Inducement, and will start a subscription with a contribution of 82500 himself, lie has also interested otbera, and baa a good many thousand dollars In sight already. This meeting, if It could be secured, .would certainly be a very big thing for Portland, and If anybody can bring It about. Mr. W'enime can. The JapaneHo naval counselor correspond ln to our secretary of COMMENT AND NEWS IN BJUEF SMALL CIL&KGB ORCGON SIOEUQ1ITS Tha North 1NU , lan't anything Ilk a loiem ihjio: a a . Who will so and find that flsg n,d nurrsn io iir All olhar nations kp their hands. on mat oio. , , , Not mueh trada will follow tha flag t tha north pola. a a MaVbe tha rain la hotdlna? off for tha ataie fair nsxt wt-k. How htth Is tha north pol. grand- rill coat A TRiniTTE TO TOIL O OREGON belongs the dls tlnctlon of being the first state ported, 61,6 per cent were returned In the Union to constitute a by Protestant bodies, 86.7 percent Labor day by law. When the by Catholic bodies, and 1.7 per cent measure was adopted by the Oregon by all others, while In 1890 the Prot Iegislature, a similar one was pend- rstants returned 68 per cent. Catho ing In the New York legislature. The lies 30.3 per cent, and other bodies New York measure was in fact the! 1.7. The rate of increase for the first to be proposed, but that in I Catholic church was 93.6 per cent Oregon was first to become a slat- more than tw ice yiat of all Protest-J country, must go on Increasing. Bu ute. The fitness of the art Is now! ant bodies taken together. Of all the Japanese are an exceedingly pa confirmed by the fact that it has church members In 1906, 43.1 per tfent and patriotic people. If they been copied in nearly if not all the I cent were male and 66.9 per cent lean stand Iv, the rest of the world states. female. has no business to complain, Labor day Is a splendid concep- The states and territories where tlon. It contemplates a laying aside Catholics predominate over Protest of the usual' duties by employer and ants are: Arizona, 66.2 per cent; the navy, urges the enlargement of the Japanese navy, and wants 15 new Dreadnaughts built as soon as papa, tnat.peopla call so grfat? possible. Japan Is a country that peculiarly needs a navy, yet to build and maintain such a navy as she thinks she needs will Impose an al most crushing cost upon her al ready heavily , burdened people. Japan Is In debt almost to the limit of endurance now, but It seems that Its enormous debt, for so little a a When Evelyn says aha wants money mora than a dlvorca, w can baliave hor. . - . . a Won't tha naxt mora ba a eollactton to sand missionaries up to convert tha north polar a a An ll-vear-old arlrl la wrltlns a clay. It will no duirbt ba mora tolerabla than soma that ara put on tha stags. Now there Is to ba a 'feminine Cook tint. There la nothlna- on aarth as au dacious as aa Inventing tnUUnar. I T IS FITTING and proper that the people of the United States, In their mad rush for wealth and fame, should stop once in each i employe for the period of one work- California, 68; Connecticut, 59.6; ling day, to the end that employed I Louisiana, 61.3; Massachusetts, 69.2; and employer may mingle together J Maine, 63.3; Michigan, 60.1; Mon- and counsel for the common good. I tana, 78.1; New York, 63.6; New It Is a hint by the legislative arm Jersey. 51.5: New Hampshire. 63: year and pay brief tribute to labor, that the Interests of capital and la- New Mexico. 88.7: Nevada. 66.7: the producer of all that'is worthbor lie in the same direction, and Rhole Island. 74: Vermont. 66.9: having, , the creator , of all realjthat by signalizing the day, peace Wisconsin. 50.5. In Wyoming and I wealth. Organized or unorganised,! Bn(j concord may settle over their Colorado the largest DroDortion. .labor Is entitled to & full share of manifold Interests. It is a confirms- thouglTtKit a majority, are Catho- creait for the advancement ana ae- tlon by the legislative authority of lies, and in Utah and Idaho Mormons veiopment or me country. the dignity of labor, and of its ex- lead. Labor day, setaslHe by Ieg!la alted art In the commpn prosperity. The hon aroma In the Willamette val ley la richer and sweeter In tha nos trils of srowers than It has baan for aeveral years past. a An ultra relllou man of Tillamook . Lebanon's naw schoolhouss 111.310... A Lebanon sunflower la 41 Inches In circumiertnce. . , a . a Blltr alrla Ara amnlnvail narklnar i"n yrunwm in caiom. ' . a a Chlesgo claims over 1,BOO,000 souls. Dui-ii means numan oainga, w petwesn Is anil 10 carloads or prunes win nava Deen suippea rrom corvauia. a . About 18.000 people ara nlcklnir hops in the aiatrlct tributary to inUapend enee, .. ' - a ' a - - - ' Mow would U do for tha monoplanlsts ana ins , oipiamsts to Jiave oaiiier . . . -r ... - . . a . . Ths mora nawapapers roast "The Olrl From Hector's" ths more moat people want to see her. v . a-. Wa have alwava read . In r-mtntrv newspapers of "flying trips," but now thay ara a reality. '- e t: I, "What is a baby worth T' 1 ona of ths silly season questions. It depends on who Is valuing It. . Tha Sprtnfrfleld News refers to Eu gene aa a suburb, and says tha court housf wtli be .moved to Bprlngfield.. e 1h REALM, rMININE,1 . Grace ; Van ' Btuddif ord. . v iwwi Grace Van Btud ''; , J, dlford. ths prima f , J donna, whose davo f - J'on to her husband , J in . bla mlalununa i 4 l,"e, 1 . , golden example for , wu.iien, na B I iia 'r I Pi for dlvorca on V. '1 the grounds of da- sertlon. Mrs. Van " : :.' . Studdlford made bar j aiava debut a MIm '5 t v tonlana. wuive witb tha Bos toniana. S brilliant After succeaa ad Marlon" sh- W- ...i.i lien tha staara and ma rriAA rh,ru. i. iouis Danker, a man of treat wealth, large eatates and faat. , it at m '' .1 The Woman Question. . ' , OMAN has for some time been .held before tha public thought as an abstract problem to be solved ss If she had no more' , r power Of lnitlatlva than th tariff has power to . reform Itself . or "natural , resources" power of sslf-con-servation. Ths "woman question" has been ths subject of learned debate, ot tialll!... i . i ' i iniiinuvv or concessive measures, of un In eVSrV sactlon of Hood River new I wnrd ur ilnnw.H . L :'.. r t . writes to the Headlight that two things resld-noes are being built, while In the pons to-see it quite as if woman Twer expense, a aog ana I ,.VVV'"" " I TL "''"'u or a matter or mllllneryy - ""'." . r, sno has Droved that tfve enactment, Is not Intended as a in emphasis of the . principle, the tribute to organized labor or to any action of the states has been followed craft or clique, but as a tribute to by the federal congress with legis- labor, skilled and unskilled, engaged lation exalting labor by proclamation In doing the work, whether with 0f a national holiday In its honor, band or with brain, required in the , The more men of all classes come wonderful development of the coun-1 to understand the respectability of honor DR. GIESY'S FORMULA "H ARMONIZE officials, deter mine definitely the center of authority and responsi bility, give honor where Is due, condemnation where BY nU.ll OYKRJIOLT. AT THE VILLAGE POSTOFFICE. I wandered to the village, Tom. the place where wa were boys About a hundred yeare ai?o, when we made all the i noise That ever happened In the town. I saw Postmaster Jones, I saw the people call for mall; the name uncertain tones Were still In vogue. . the same old try. Labor day is set aside In honor! honest toil, the more permanent ef- condemnation Is due; publish 'of lah6r, whether It be on the farm, listing civic institutions will be. Toil conditions as they are. and in a I month the dairies will be sanitary, the milk supply clean." There Is an absolutely correct diagnosis of the situation. It is an effective for mula, by which. to reach results. By applying It, clean milk can be se cured for Portland "In a month." It is a matter of the utmost ease, if only the means above outlined be followed. The authority Is ample. The state and city governments have done their full part. The existing laws are efficacious. The end sought Is not extremely difficult. All that are a needless Dreachrr. Tha weather fjureau thought It Was about time to rain, but Jupiter Pluvlua Is a Jolly old soul and wanted tha hops gathered. . Jiirfarlnr from descrlotlons of Dr. Cook. It mlg-ht not be safe for any of aha ba laf mm a heart even under th Deach basket, and A i-K a ... .e.. .... . . Z"S "2B. LS"??T ' y.glOVe and gene scarcely six Inches In length con- just now there are slsns of abstraetlni talned seven large pears, weighing I J man Into a raoa'Xew ft" h Is turn. POnA: rft?V1 Christian rclenca Pany Monitor fakerj a a Mra. Took la very clad that her hus band has discovered the pole. .Mrs. Peary congratulates Dr. Cook If he has discovered tha pole. Mrs. Cook has no doubt. Mrs. Peary uses an "If." They are typical women. In the workshop, factory pr mill, in has a part In the creation of all the bank or In the store;, In front wealth, and it is a most formidable , of the typewriter or in front of the part. It is not only a formidable range; wherever toll Is required to factor in creating, but It was the produce a livelihood, there Labor beginning: of wealth. . It was the la day Is Intended to carry cheer and bor of men's hands that made the .. hope to the toiler and brighter pros- original capital, and by that same pects to his posterity. (labor capital has ever since been - A narrow view has been taken by supported. Conversely, the capital . many, that the day is set aside-for In the evolution of processes has be . the glory of the labor union, for the come as essential to labor as labor men who my some secret comblna- is essential to capital. The Interests tlon propose to control the condi- of the two are Immediately and inti tlons of labor and '.the wages to be mately joined. Their inter-depend paid for certain service. Labor day ent movements and operations should have a broader purpose than should be as harmonious as the thaL It vaa Intended to have, and smoothly and noiselessly working only the perverted prejudice of peo- machines that enter into the activi ,ple has narrowed Its scope down to ties in which both are factors. Each a day of labor unions, for labor should recognize and reward the ef- vnions and by labor unions. J forts of the other, and Labor day is , Still, narrowed down to the last an appeal In that commendable be- analysie, Labor day has a startling half significance. When It is understood that an army ot 8,000,000 men and women, banded together by bonds of mutual helpfulness, stand shoulder to shoulder, In all parts of the world, where labor has dignity and wealth has power, demanding fair condi- WELL IRRIGATIOX M R. R. M. BRERETON has pub lished an instructive pam phlet that should be of much value to western Oregon I hundred years ago. crowd asked for their mail, you know. Who never aot a letter since . a A MELLOW DRAMA. "Have you no sole?" The speaker, clad In clerical garb, gazed Into the eyes of the young lady opposite. She bowed her head as If to hide her shame. Outside the noise of the buyer and seller in the busy mart went on unmindful of what was taking place Inside those doors. The silence in the room was tense. Once mora the clerical gentleman was speaking. "I say, have you no ole?" "No;" came the low, tremulous an swer. "Well, then, bring me some salmon. THE POCKET DICTIONARY. To the man who rises to remark that is required Is for officialdom to do pUT Roubles are but figments of the ,. . . , , , I brain and that nothing is really bad I its duty under the law. The final- would submit a rest pocket dictionary. ity Will' be Clean, wholesome milk " he does not know the meaning, of f, TWi,t .fflt f, ,MMn sucn worasas cow, nen. latner, dog or v.. x. wui.v.vu, nay ne win continue his remarks. But more confidence and happiness for I if he really thirsts for knowledge and Brli.Ua mnro mfllr eonsnmprT nnrl . ,",)r. 5" ' ne wut -ex itDjr per- tlons of labor and fair remuneration I farmers, on "Well Irrigation for for toilfreely given, Labor day as- Small Farms." In the introduction sumes respectability, even If it Is given credit as being only for or ganized workers. When it Is known that over 2,500,000 of these organ ized toilers live in the United States and struggle day in and day out for the welfare of the country at large , and for their own gain, something can be realized of the importance of the celebration that is being held throughout the United States today. . The combination of toilers in trades tinions was "but the natural and necessary result of the wonder ful Industrial development of, this country during the past half cen tury. Organization was but the le gitimate prerogative of tollers, espe cially with the example of combina tion and trust among the masters who controlled the development of the country and the ability of men to earn. Organization came and will remain. There is no longer need . for debate upon the problem of the perpetuity of the labor union In one form or another. Whatever abuses may have crept . Into union organizations in rare cases may be overlooked largely for the good that has been done by the promulgation of the idea of mutual helpfulness and encouragement in times of distress and trouble. When workingmen realize that they are supported by their fellows, that they are not fighting alone the battles against unfair conditions and star vation wages, courage and dter mination are foetered and main tained, giving the world a better cit izen and a more competent workman. No man can do his best hfn he is "afraid of his job." or on the verge of starvation. Unionism in principle is right, hut perverted by dishonest and unscru pulous shysters, it becomes, lifcp a flood of water, a dangerous element. almost Deyona control. So far In I this country It has made conditions I better, raised the standard of work manship, forced children to be kept In school Instead of In factory or tn mj!l. and eertd a tremendous in fluence against women laboring in competition with men, whose duty It Is held to be to provide for the home and give childhood a chance la the world. he says: "As blood Is the life of living beings, so water is the life of all vegetation. Population will mul tiply, but land that produces food can never increase in area. The tillable lands of the Willamette, Umpqua and Rogue river valleys now produce, without Irrigation, but a third or the crops which the soli Is capable of yielding, if provided with the necessary moisture during the best growing and maturing por tion of the year. The neces sary amount of water Is contained in the subsoil within easy reach; the cost of applying it is a small percentage of the value of the crop; by-1tB tse the bulk Is doubled and trebled, and tJie-slze. and quality largely increased. Utilization, of water, underlying every acre, will soon treble present population and establish small farms in place of large ones." The Willamette valley contains approximately 8,000,000 acres of land, of which 3,200,000 are avail able for tillage; Umpqua valley has 200,000 acres suitable for small farms, and Rogue river valley 1, 500,000 acres, though the total area of these three valleys Is about 3,- 550,000 acres, aKscssed at 339,000,- 000. With water from wells on portions where it Is quite feasible. this value would he Increased to at least $100,000,000. Mr. Brereton proceeds to discuss sclentlfcally and elaborately the means of development which the title of his pamphlet suggests, and presents numerous illustrations to explain and fortify the text. He discusses soils, artesian basins, val ues of products, cooperative banking systems In rural districts for Irriga tion purposes, and means and cost of pumping water for irrigation pur posf What be has to say is upon a matter of very grat Importance and his pamphlet ought to be studied by every western Oregon farmer. far better business for the dairymen, better repute for Portland, and one more stride made toward a greater city. Is it' not worth while? It is Dr. Glesy who puts forth the formula above, which this newspaper fully indorses, as a complete working plan for securing perfectly clean milk for Portland. Dr. Giesy knows. His connection with the former health board placed him in complete touch with the situation. His ex perience and attainments as a phy sician enable him to speak with au thority. He knows fully the rela tions of officials, the relations of each to the situation, and the facts using the little pocket mind destroyer ne win die a drunkard and an outcast. A PAINFUL LIFE. "There's something sad and melan choly about the harvest time. Isn't there?" spake the city boarder to Far mer Hoggs. "They shore Is." replied the farmer. Kr you listen to th hired man over thar in th medder you kin hear the grass scythe and mown. An' I 'low ef you wui a- good listener you could hear the crops growln' Sorter like a field hosplttle, ain't it?" Photographing the Invisible. From Popular Mechanics. There are many movements so rapid that the eye cannot ' ee them, yet at tempts are being made, and with par tial success, to catch such movements with kinematograph cameras and re- and reasons that contribute to pres- cTParly seen. ent and past, .failures in behalf of The picture taking machine that has wholesome milk. Portland wants safe and sane milk. Every home In Portland wants It. There Is not one family In the city that wants any chances taken on the question of whether or not the milk contains Impurities. If there is to be any error, every moth er and every father in Portland wants that error made on the side of safety. Not one of them has any patience with the thesis -that public effort cannot secure good milk. They know better. . Every One of tbn. will at once recognize the soundness of the plan proposed by Dr. Glesy. He says: "Harmonize officials, de termine definitely the center of au thority and Tesponsibilltyjgive honor where honor Is due, condemnation where condemnation is due; publish conditions as they are, and In a month the dairies will be sanitary and the milk supply clean." met with the most success so far is the Invention of Privy Councillor Cranx of Berlin, and It takes no less than 500 pictures a second. The secret Is the use for Illuminating purposes of the electric spark, each spark representing a fresh picture. Among the sets of pic tures taken of rapidly moving bodies is one which shows a hone being pene trated by a rifle bullet, and a bullet entering a bladder filled with water. The films, run through the projecting machine at a slower, speed than that at which they were talcen. show the bone hanging free, the bullet approaching It gradually, piercing and splitting It. and proceeding on Its way. The films aHq show parts tf the powder gases leavfnV"the bairel of thr g-un before : the shot, v. a a I What shall V. An mitt. ki OrtS Eugene man lost $25 to'-another by him? la it for hla highest interest nn a. Kt ih.t tmiA t.am. enn M not I to associate, with th. ninMi ur r .nil ivi mtij l " ------- - " : I nit-. . V . . . , l. t,. rfnnMor. tn toll him to his face pun a oumD wagon loaaea witn oin l .J. " m ma American maraalna sava that ha Is a geographical or scientific out of a pit. , - I jnat at first it waa feared leat coeduca- x t - 1 ...... ...vu.u iiinauuiiiusv - women; oui The Guard claims that In Eugene this already tha cry la that It feminises year there Is a new business building man. And this la a saying of deep being commenced every weuk.and a moment. It shows that tha influence naw residence every day. ff woman Is already preponderating at a fn Coeducational colleges, though she A farm near Talent of $05 acres of " J?y, 5?5 ln, th minority thera atUU choice fruit land, 60 of which is ln .TnJ. i"?,?"' cPunor sralnst tha Pili: young apples, with JO acree of peaoh J1., dv,opraent, of .woman la that U She has come back, or la coming trees, soia ror iui,uu. grossnesa of m.n'V ' ZZr?..Z soon, from the wave-capped sandy sea- I i ariivitla. rsi.n - lr. ' shore, w th tanned face and a Tina. j .nd Wa are alsc to have currency reform ling with men ln the field of public V.1mF ,,f!LP' . .r, v.nlah b Mr. Aldrich and men who follow him duty, wall the cry then be that woman's hearts a rcore. The tan will and Joe Cannon; that is, currency re- Influence so far preponderates thougb the sea-scenes fade; she will now dress k h. e w.n r sh mv .tin k. i. . . .v.. na be ?.rauri.VJli!!ita'n.w a a polls that ahe la feminising politics? Ex ', hoarts wl 1 grow sound again; they re DeLashmutt says- "Hillsboro ch,ef Jusjics Fuller speaks thus of tha irferhea'ttrwtfih'e'sitsm. JT tSSA i J i25H minis a-whirl; she's heaven In part, five yeirMow you mr wn i y. minnj7h, K""".; th. other part's-well. she's tha Or.- Tou are . going to get i mills here, and ulm fl11 .n Bummer uiri! - I moment to 'scratch' tha bad and aubstt ; " , , I ' Itute the gaod. It 18 just so with tha A magaclne writer a-tves a valuable I D( .1. rpvi. i. th. tTm I nmnrr,. rr.n. ... m...t .it...... reclpo for exterminating flies. - He Ob- ..nlf'BP of ffce with which the writer have a mixture of officeholders. I havva ' serves tnat a Xly is rar mors easily wM 'eve r .connected where there was seen the effects of female suffrage, arfd. caught by a slow than by a swift mo- We8te mall t0 t VPt , The pacific instead of being a means of encourage- tlon Of tne hand. A SlOW mOtlOn dOeS I - I thA lanalnn 1 mant tn frii4 inj nrrnnHnn t t.nrf. not alarm the b'aK ,,&.bU!!lva of our circulation in that direction. greatly to purify elections and promota fly creature, is quicker than the queck- " "" . ' better government." est possible motion of a human hand. , - r , Therefore the best way to catch 1 tv fly J.', "Every man can maka tha world bet- L", t'S!1"' ""ljLhK,,ha, thV:: ?hi ttVrUtveh.r.qUaTha '"rSnes'Tre '?.!:. ftt whiie ha la rmmumwttojiMi&t&lzw large, are splendidly shaped and m m finirer uDon the flv. If this cn ba have an excellent flavor. In Eugene K K H rinn. fin .nniirh tha. fllea in nona I zo SiriS . are paewna green imiiaii i for. s 1 prunes. FAMOUS GEMS OF PROSE Viior of Democrstic Governments 'By .Charts James Fox (From a speech on a motion for leave to present a reform election bill ln the English house of commons, May 38, 1797 When we look at the democracies of tha ancient world wa aro compelled to acknowledge their oppressions to their dependencies: their horrible acts of In justice and of Ingratitude to their own cltlsens; but they compel us. aiso, to admiration, by their vigor, their con stancy, their spirit and their exertions, ln every great emergency in which they were called upon to act. We are com pelled to own that the democratic form of government gives a power of which no other form is capable. Why? Be cause It Incorporates every man with the state. .Because It arouses every thing that belongs to the soul as well as to the body of man. Because H makes every individual feel that he Is fight ing for himself; that it Is his own cause, his own safety, hla own dignity, on the face of the earth, that he is asserting. Who, that reads the history of the Persian war what boy. whose; Velvet Sponge Cake. TWO eggs beaten light, beat in ona cupful of granulated or powdered sugar, one half cup of sifted flour, ' next one half cupful of flour sifted with one teaspoon full of baking powder and lastly add' gradually one half - (scant) cupful of boiling water. Have the tins buttered, fill and bake Immediately ln it 1-.. t. r A , Kv th. 0rfif1ft M nil .film v ----- ----- use ot one mora .egg any layer cake principle, the key to all the wonders may be ma.de better than with butter, which were achieved at Thermopylae and For this save two of the whites for elsewhere and of which the recent and frosting, using the other egg and the marvelous acts of the French people two yoms lor me cane. are) pregnant examples? Without dis guising the vices of FrRnce without overlooking the horrors tnat nave Dn committed and that have tarnished the glory of the revolution It cannot be denied that they have exemplified the doctrine that if you wish for power you must look to liberty. If ever there was t R naked Summer Squash - EMOVE the Insidcs of eight sum mer squashes with a spoon an.1 mix It with one sixth head of solid cabbage, four large onions and thrca moment when this maxim ought to be wlth BnH .nMnn. t.lt deaf to US, It is the present. We have tablespoonfuls 6f butter In spider and tried all other means. We have ad- fry chopped Ingredients light browr. dressed ourselves to all the base pas-1 Remove and stuff sauce in the squash inn. nr tha nennin w nava trterf to I BKins ana place in pan ana DHKe terrify them into exertion; and all has minuteainnotoven been unequal to our emergency. Let us try them by the only means which ex perience Remonstrates to be invincible. Let us address ourselves to their love! Let us Identify them with ourselves. Let us make It their own cause as well aa ours! Missouri is the latest state to take radical action against the firearms pest. It has a law forbidding the display of pistols In store windows, and the Illegal carrying of a shoot ing weapon is a penitentiary offense. Several other southern states have passed similar laws, that or Texas, where a few years ago shooting was exceedingly frequent, being perhaps f tho most radical of any. Th better elements of society in the south have become Intolerant of the gun toters, and northern states and cities would do well to follow their example. Jane Addams Birthday. Miss Jane Addams, one of the foremost social reform workers ln America and founder of Hull House, Chicago's famous social settlement, was born ln CedarvIHe, IIL. September, 0, mo. As a girl she attended a country school near her home and then entered Rockford college, . from which she was graduated In 1881. She began the study of medicine ln Philadelphia, but 111 health caused her to abandon her plan to become a physician, and for several yars she traveled In Europe, While RNroad she became Interested In the work trat was being done to better the rnnditlon of the poor of London. Ih lss. when she returned to America, Miss Addems decided to try the Lon don experiment on a small scale among the poor of Chicago. With several associates she secured an old 'residence In the midst of a foreign and poverty- s'rlrken tectlon of the. city. Th first activity of tfie Settlement was devoted to caring for the children of the neigh borhood. The institution waa success ful from tha beginning. New buildings have been added to Hull House from time to time. Including a coffee house, a children's building and a gymnasium. A, big fight Ja on between several of ths wevtera railroads to secur t tnall carrying contracts for the 1 tl four rears. Ths Eanta r of - OirRCH MEMBERSHIP FIGl RES A' CCOItDING to s digest of a re port of the census of religious bodies, church membership in t be Tutted Stats Increased from I J. 7 per cnt of the population In 1M0 to IJ.l per tent of the popu lation la ItQ. - The relative gain la tbs 1C years for Protestant rhnrcben, l.l per cent; for Roman Catholic, 4A fr cent; for all otters. Mr. Hery Wemme-, president of the Portland Automobile clubhand leading champion, tn deeds as well as words, of gQod roads. Is a speci men of the sort of men who build up cities and make them great and fa mous. Mr. Wemme is not only a noted sntomobillst, but Is aa enthu siast on aviation, and he Is endeavor ing to secure for this city the meet Ing next year of tha world's avia tors, such as has Just been held atJ KDeims, t ranee. This Is a big ae kerne, but therefor all the more attractive and aereptable to Mr. Wemme. Knowing cat tn any such v This Date la History. 1T1I Mississippi company secured charter for IOulslana. 171 A British force under Bene dict Arno'd ravaged the coaat of Con necticut. li4 Britlah captured Plattsburg, X. 1UI Ftrdinang Z ef . A art Ha mown ad at Milan. lt yotiumeat to the memory of 8tpben A. Douglas dedicated In Chi cago. 1 1" Lafayette statue unvested In I'nlon Sqvar. New Tnrfc City. I Ml President McKlnley a hot at tha Buffalo) exposition. A woman 1 suing for a dirorra rrm the ground that bar hoabane) triad ta tact Iter la tka pan try. . ' An Oracle of Mossbackism. From the Pendleton East Oregonlan. "Before we had all these physicians and their prophylactics," said the oracle of mossbackism, "we managed somehow to live. Indeed, the health of the state gave alarm to nobony, till these learned persons got at It and told by their dia thesis how feverish, how distressingly cachetic. Its condition was. , This is an advanced stand indeed, the Oree-onlan takes. Sura, ' people lived" before they had any dairy inspection. 80 did they live before they had sewer systems, Derore vaccina tion was adopted and before careful Quarantine regulations stopped the en trance of old world plagues Into this country. But people live better and longer because of the successful bat tle science Is waging with disaase. Med ical men are now striving vigorously to eliminate tuberculosis, tha most dreaded of all diseases, and the attack upon Impure milk Is but one move in the campaign. It Is Important that the milk supply of a city should ba pro tected for the reason tnat milk con stitutes almota perfect media for the propagation of disease germs. Oregon has suffered through . slack work in ths office of the food and dairy commissioner. In other-lines some good up to data work has. been done. Through the work of the sht-ep commission- and the federal bureau of animal industry scab has been, almost eliminated from th state. Horticultural inspectors ara doing away with the wormy apple and other classes or diseased rrun. tiui in the matter of dairy Inspection Oregon has remained where It was 60 years ago. This tias largely been due u xne fact that for many years tha state has bad a dairy commissioner who IS no toriously unfit. It looks now Ilka hla dav of reckoning haa come.'' It is car talnly time for a new deal In tha food and dairy commissioner's "office and neither the poor grammar of tha pres ent Incumbent nor tha sneering defense made1 for him by tha Oregonlan should stop his going. - . tbs first day that water, was turned Into tha ditch. The fertile lnn,i of the LaCreols valley. Immensely productive weeks only, even under present conditions, would cases, each containing then yield an annual profit five times I cans, are packed annually, with 42.000. as great as that Which the farmers arelOOO fish, and the market value of the now realising from It. An acre of ground product Is $28,000,000. There are 200 Killing the Salmon. From the Technical World Magazine. Ten thousand people are in the salmon catching and canning business. The season is short and the harvest is said to be uncertain. Tho salmon run, as it is called the plunge of the mating pairs to .the nesting grounds far up stream from the sea, lasts from one to three Yet 4,000,000 to 8,000.000 48 one pound The Way to Do It. From tha Dallas Observer. If the people of Dallas want their town to growa to dty.ef tone or is. 000 population wRhln tho next five years, the Obaarwr can tell thera exact ly how they can bring about tha desired result: Oo Into tha mountains West of town, build aa Iramanaa dam acroee any one of Jhe numftwii canyona in tha La Creole river, and thus form a great storage raaervolr from which every foot of land la tha LaCraole bottom from ElleadaJe to tha Willamette rlvar can be irrigated la tha dry summer tnentr.s Such a project would coat money, and Iota ef It, but tha returns on -tha in vestment would 'prova profitable from now worth 1100 would then find eager buyera at ssoo, and It would be better worth the latter sum than it is now worth Its present price. With the trans portation facilities - already provided and those sure to be added within tha next few years, the farmerv orchardlst and gardner would find a ready market for every pound of fruit and vegetables be could produce. With a plentiful sup. ply of water for irrigation purposes, it would then be possible for a farmer to make a living for himself and family on rive acres or ground, and 10 or 15 acres would soon make him Independ ent This favored portion of Polk coun ty would then afford homes for : five times tha present suburban population. and Dallas would keep pace with the growth. 'Such a project would in no way Interfere with the water supply of the farmers living along the stream In ths east end of the county, as ths wa ter which would be stored In 'the moun tains is the water which Is now running to .waste In the winter season. This water poured out on the thirsty land in tne dry months would bring a steady stream or goiaen, dollars that would soon maka Dallaa ona of tha big towns of western Oregon, and the day will as surely. coma when this work of develop meat will ba carried to a successful reality aa It la certain that tha sun win rise over the Cascade mountains tomor row morning. Discreditable 8 port. From ths Myrtle Point Enterprise. The Coos Bay Times of recent dite contains aa article supposed to ba cred itable to a party of seven hunters, of whom fqur wars Women, wha went. Into Curry county and killed between IS and II deer. While tha party may have bean strictly within their legal rights In slaughtering that many deer, it U this sort Of bogglahneaa that disgusts toe legitimate nunter wno hunts for tha sport s sake or because ha can use toe meat. This would be a big klllina- ta extend through the season, but Is a rec ord that muet have been made In three Weeks at the -most If every party that went est would slaughter an tha deer that thay oould ar that tha law allow there would be little such sport left la a vary faw years, but fortunately there ara many Burners who are satisfied ta atop within a reasonable limit and leave a few animals for others er to keep tha stock of game op for fatara years. Thera waa certainly, nothing very smart or glorifying la the repArted achieve ment ef tha Coos Ear tarty. canning plants along the Pacific coast from California to Alaska and so many thousands of snares for the finny vie tlms that new comers ln the trade act ually have difficulty to find places in which to spread their own decoys. It Is a short time they - have and the work Is fast and furious, and has In It all the ruthlessness of other such kill ings. . The, fish must be dressed and canned while they are fresh and firm, and the speed to handle at the canneries the huge takes of the multitude of firth ermen must be great The hands of men are too slow for tha work. Even specialists and there were multitudes of them a very few years since In ths art of cleaning fish, are useless. A short time ago. thousands of Chines employed In the canneries, who did nothing else and knew almost nothing else but to wield the knife over the salmon, worked with almost Incredible skill to keep pace with the supply. Now a machine, called the Iron chink, be cause it does the human chink's work or rather the work of many chinks is established In each factory and turns the shinning river beauties Into estahlce at tha rate of ona a second Instead the hand rate of one a minute that to be a boast. A two horse power en gine thus does tha work of SO Chines workers, for each machine contents It self with so little power. ' turns I :ahlcVi H arry Tli aw (CeotrltRitM ta TV Journal kr Walt Vim, tta famtMM fcaraaa snet. Hla praea-Bnetaa ara a reralar real ara of tlia ewiama la Iba Dally Journal.) I'm sorry for llarrr. an ftiufnll. tried! The sweet boon of freedom in him la denied: In gloomy asylums bee destined to dwell, to eat la a duntmi and sleep in a cell: removed from the woria. wim it rumor and strife, 10 mix with the flotsam and Jetsam of l.fe. I haven't the sail, er I haven't the guile, to ask thla poor fellow to cheer up rd m4e; I r. aren't the con science -to go to his cell, and murmur: -Don't wrorrv. and all will be Well T I'd rather arpmarh him and whler-err "Old sport, ahen ret they are teailrg four brains ta th- cotrt, be e-it nsj a foul. Vou brought yowreeif SNcg to your present dletreee, by paflnr you Wanted to write for the pre, Hefnr t Hat eanottncemetX your rhanre were great; by making It ruMfr mm jvtr v 11 fair; n lae copa. yn-ire. trust gire yow la aid t-e eharg, 'urr" -Brir fc'r o wander af V irwM. tens Wr f jy V "I auttee, aeaaavl LVSXjv, U