The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, September 09, 1909, Page 8, Image 8

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(J0DENM3
THE JOURNAL
AJt IXPKPKNIJlt XtWSrArSR.
THE MACMASTER PLAN
C JACKSON.
.FublUhar
asihlkkerf mr Menlne (eirent Sunday) and
ererr Knadar inoraliii at The Journal Build.
' tn(. ritib and yantiill tr-l, furtlaud. Or.
w
ITU a business man's keen
penetration, President Mao-
Master of the chamber of
commerce off era a sound
., t.t.i .. th. MtBm .t PMtit. or . f. ana praoti.ai plan ror perfecting
' trn.aiMkHi itm ib biu i ti portlmd i milk supply. He says:
"Dairies must all be licensed
Tei.ki-iionem-m.1. tits; Homk, a-h. That license will mean that the
All departmebte W'M b (boa numarrm. - - -
Trii iba mx-rxor h.t avpartmaut ro want. I dairy Itself U sanitary, that the cows
foreiux advektisinu kepbssentatiye. ar healthy and kept clean and that
Hrnjania , KntM c... Hrunawirt RuiMini, mo attendants are not oniy ciean.
p nfiiiTfi.ii., New ior; iah "rjbut rigidly careful In handling the
I milk to keep It away from dirt.
Th Journal la en file In London. Knfland,
-at the office of The Journal a Kncllth rrnrr
eentatlrea. K i. Ilardr A Co
street, where eubeerltlutii aud advert inroienta
niu m rveeieea.
Siinerrfptinn "Vrrai bjr null or to any addreae
in in uuuee cu tea, uauana or ueiioo
DAILT. .
On fraf ........15.00 Oa mecto
"( acxDAT.
On fair.....; . $160 ( On month
DAILT AND SrTWAT.
On year $T..V) On month ,
$ I
$ .
.We see a world of pains
. taken, and the best years of
.lifaspcnt In collectin g -a set
of thoughts In a college for
- the conduct of life, and, after
all, the man so qualified shall
hesitate la his speech to a
good suit of clothes, and
want common sense before
an agreeable woman. Hence
Jt la ' that . "Wisdom, Valor,
Justice and Learning cannot
keep In countenance a man
that la possessed of these ex
cellences, If. he wants that
Inferior art of life and be
havior called good breeding.
Steele.
A rlnlrv that Arm t-t in nnr t Via
r ioH reaulrements of this license should
not be allowed to noil milk. The
city health officers roust be vested
with authority to Inspect these
dairies as frequently as they desire
and at any time they desire. They
should have authority to summarily
stop the sale of milk from dairies
f .sal that do not meet requirements.
'As I see It, It Is in this way, and
raitbia way alone, that the milk supply
can oe maae wnat it snouia oe. cer
tainly nothing relates itself more
closely to-t he health of our people
and particularly the infants. It Is
a cause In which every good citizen
will cooperate."
"The plan Is easily practicable. If
Commissioner Bailey will not do his
4uty it Is the only alternative. The
license system would be welcomed
by clean dairymen. It would doubt-1
turned he would claim thlM and he
In effect declare that- Cook's story
1 a whole-cloth fake. A man who,
.a he an aid tn the mnr rjralou Without Waiting tO hear What Cook's
dairymen., The .Inspection system vidence Is. asserts this, and who at
a uu irauu, oniy veumjm aim own un
live r1lahnntv lla annnAwn Cook
essential to sanitary milk. Many of haa'done what he himself would do.
them do not know these, hut arehf u Dad the nerve and the oppor-
anxious to learn, were the faults I tunlty. For hundreds of years eml
of their method pointed out most I nent scientists and geographers have
dairymen would be quick to correct believed that K waa quite , possible
rthera. If Inspector through a 11-1 lu vm-u lu """ ui
cong- .vstem reouired them to do raw Of thesr) mtnerto obscure pro-
so all would adopt methods that 'eMOI " once .rusa inio pnni 10
would vieid uerfMt milk from no dy mat an eiccpuonauy m man
COMMENT, AND NEWS IN BRIER
SMALL CUANQB
t RE.ALM,
ILMININL
cessity, if not by choice
No dairyman desires to sell dan
gerous milk. Toe wcoie trouble is
their lack of knowledge of the means
has done the trick?
The death of S. L. Kline,, an
nounced from t'orvallls yesterday.
O. you kids only till Monday.
-'
Cook baa no official push bahlnd him.
Flnoat month of (hi vaar for beach
Vial ting. - . , , .
Th Illll wav of bulldlnr railroads Is
to iiuild them. ,
Oron dodI ar laamlna- ta fir with
their own wings.
There Is earUlnlv room-for two men.
or even mora, to travel to the pole.
Canada mar claim the Dole reclon.
Increaaa the armvl Btrenarthen thanavvl
War!
But will
the rnl tad States be blgl
na geia
meir lacs; or anowieage oune means m0mpnt that tha world nouf' to hold Peary when h
of sanitation, and the unlnterest and w" B moment that woria tackf. '
, calls InaDDroDrlate. lie wai In thel
careiessatwB at rmpiuvea, ninaiasi - - - ... . . . . J Ari- all h.r inni....nt
can be one of the dirtiest processes! T"' "' """f features, In some cases. In a bank re- welahed
OltKGO.N 8IDEUGUT8 -
t a ' - I. '
New two story brlck at Ontario, ,
An 140 acre farm near Union sold
for 110,000.
' k.
Tarm of 0 acres nar' Ontario sold
for in.ooo. i " '
War has been declared on billboards
to Uaker City.
Madras Is to have a bank, and prob
ably a flouring mill. . ,
. There are it atacks of wheat on TO
acres In Grand Ronde. ' 4 . ,
. .
Mllton-Freeweter prunes are coming
Into favor in the east
Errs 40 cents I doirn In Lakeview. I starts' to schooL lis boalns to
Good place up there for a hennery. Iirowiup rar.ldly and thoae early years
' a ? ' J call t o careful ruldlnt; from the mother
Three pears raised near Milton who can rive individual care, for they
plahed l ounces; 1 J prunes 4t ounces, are the chlWa formative period.
- ; - ' ' ' ' . When the child atarts to school 'th
Fifteen German families- of Boutn greater part of the day is spent away
Starting the Babr to fch.l
T IB neaiing the beginning of th
mii etnooi term and many mothers.
If lhay had, the privilege, would
soon have to decide rhe question
vi aonuiug in "lby to school
thla year or waiting until next. In
inn out or ten cases It would be bet- '
ter to wait until next If It wera not
for the draatla school law which com
pels th attendance of "children at the
age of (.
Almost every mother dreads, sending
the baby to school and would wisely
put it off as long as possible, for tha
baby la never quit the baby after
In the world, and It is the dirt with of rer of busy usefulness. He ceiv.r.hlp,
Ira luuilhla rrintonr f rlans-orniia "' v" . i TTn.r . hnk , i ., ih.t n. n.i..i. .r.1 n aettla near UO- f mm 7 1. '
germs that la the chief menace to mercantile houses In the Interior of an Trust A Ravings concern could nevr ion. 1 . of .uaaher who mu.t work accord-
Za.,th the State, business built up by his hav operated. . , e e jng to system and has no time al-
Lln..ni It will own sagacity and Industry. Hew.. Anxious Inquirer: Nov neither Cook's ..ISwjl rtln. to ilTctZJ1 ."nt,0,,
.h i-,iiM h. progressive and public spirited cit-Per L2.k J" UJ L y"'L,w..n't b ba-1 traD,' - t-. r hrThw-:i,hn is-turhed out io
ICOLU LUC; ACSDVJia Kfl UlvnuiiuVHB axs v - . , ... , -- nria xwupb mm I VI as riiaii. a -
la a -.-.-i-i-r v 1 - ' V i
It ni rfrt trio .,lmn.t rood "The H-Ton wnose passing is lw. w nis
cense Issued on that Inspection will cltv Rna community. ...
Kn tho dairvman'a credentials. It
I V I, I - M . .
will he tha consumer s sruarantee. " BecauH 04
True, it could all be avoided, if jwriy inactivity in in aairy. ana 100a
Railov would do his dutr. But he commissioner s ornce mat Mr
doflnn't. and the MacMaster nlan Bailey, is being considered aa an
commends itself as an intelligent eusmie ror tne state Doara or ag
auhafltnlo If not a hoi for intern I TlCUICUreT
Play with all sorts and condition of
Extreme Peary. partisans intimate thatl rellst' ls wrestling with Satan In Lake- I from helpful, to the child fresh from
It waa very ungentlemanly for Cook to view. ( t home who la open 1o all new Imprea-
In the walla waua vaiiey. ner
ton, farmers will cut a rounn 01
crop of alfalfa. .
butt In and get to the pole first
A rood nlac for thousands of Port.
land people to visit next week will
be th Stat fair grounds at Salem.
J
Of course there will be a Roa Fea-
JAPAXESE TISITORS
T
the terror of compulsion in his lash.
The people are in charge of their
own affairs. Terrible condition In
deed f What is left for Woodruff
and Barnes? What Is to become of
Piatt and Odell? What outlook Is
there for Firigy Connor, and Mur
phy? The Jblow will almost kill
Tammany. We are glad you
HE THOROUGH way In which went west, Statesman Conklin.' Go
the Japanese government and again. Bring another message like
the Japanese people do things this. The people are ready for the
Is well Illustrated by the visit issue."
. . 4
to wis country of a large party of New York will not get a primary
prominent .Japanese people, who are haw worth much, as yet. even with
In Portland today, and who will the effort, of Governor Hughes in
visit all the principal cities of this its favor, nor will the other boss
ridden, .machine ruled politician
plundered states as yet. , They will
get it whenever the people break
sway from party leadership and put
aside party "loyalty" long enough to
smash the machines, unhorse the
bos. politicians of both parties, and
send men to the legislature abso
lutely pledged to do their will and
not till then.
vlcted, but " the supreme court re
versed this judgment and ordered
the defendant discharged, on the
ground that baseball was not - a
game or sport like the others enum-
... .J f 1 Jl JI.Y.1.
ciaicui'ur iiuuiuiai, or uiscrruimuio, i -niitttt OVKB-MOLT.
sucn as ine legislature mienaea to letter FROM A NEAR SPORTS
country. They come to. study com
merclal, economic and political con
1 ditlons, and our methods and cus
torn.. They seek knowledge
mean, of which they may be able to
suggest and help to work out even
further improvement, in . their ow
.country. They may not, certainly
Should not, in their own minds, ap
prove of and Indorse all that, they
ae In thla country, but they realize
that this Is a land of wonderful
world beating resources and prog
resa, and they will find much here
to Interest and Instruct them.
- The Japanese, are a marvelously
progressive aud accomplishing peo
ple themselves; they have made
themselves In half a century the
wonder .1 and admiration of the
world; and these eminent eitisens of
that remarkable country should and
will find here, as In other Ameri
can-ritier,ardIaTwelrome and a
friendly disposition to aid them in
their laudable quest.
rOLITICTAXS FEAR DIRECT NOM
INATIONS
T
T-
v
t
HE NEW YORK legislature pro
vided for a trip out west of a
junketing committee authorized
to study the primary nomina-
s tlon laws of Illinois, Wisconsin and
other states. It is an anti-Hughes,
anti-primary law committee, that
seeks not the truth, but any possi-
, ble facts or testimony to discredit a
primary law. That It report would
- he wholly adverse was known when
Z It was appointed; it was appointed
'or.ne express purpose of making
an adverse report, whatever the 1
a, tacts. A member of thla committee.
Assemblyman Robert J. Conklin, has
given out several Interviews, voic
ing extreme opposition to any law
for direct nominations, In advance
of the formal report. What he says
counts for nothing. He is a typical
, machine politician, whose occupa
tion a good primary law would de
" stroy, and the. rest of the committee
are birds of the same feather.
- The Chicago Record-Herald (Re
v publican) says Mr. Conklin has
been gathering misinformation chief
ly, that he is a "spoils bigot" and
that "what he says is grotesquely
false," and that In it there "Is not
even a pale reflection of the truth."
This fellow Conklin told the New
York people that there was "political
anarchy" In the middle west on ac-
count of direct nominations; there
were no more any party organlia
tlons, "big" men were sick of the
law, etc. But the Chicago paper
ays Conklln's story Is trans
parent, shameless fraud"; It was
based solely on the evidence of "dis
gruntled spoilsmen and cheap little
dos get ; and the evidence of strong,
capable truthful witness was en
tirely disregarded; and that "th"
weight of Impartial and Judicious
testimony wm on the side of direct
nominations."
The New York American com
ments sarcastically on Conklln's re
port of "political anarchy and
chao," tn part a follows: "But
why thl wild appeal of the west
ern politician to save the country
from direct nominations? What
ham has It don to th west? Let
Cot. k! in tell: "Direct ' nomtnaticni
have driven political parties oat of
exUtenc. Tarty orgaclsa
t iocs are pi arch shot to piece. go
tits ta th monstroa evil wrought
If direr eomlaations. The " poll
t! !a has lost Lis job. Th raa
chiTje rue s:rpl r. leash of con
t'o. Tt nartj- l oss has no lot get i
MAKING BRUTES OF MEN
A'
COMPLETE victory has been
won by the strikers over the
Pressed Steel Car company at
McKee's Rocks. Five thou
sand worimen are Involved, and they
are to return to work at the rate of
1000 a week. Sixty per cent of
them are foreigners, and Rev. Ly
man E. Davis of Pittsburg in an ar
ticle-In theNew York Independent
says that in Pittsburg and through
out the affected region public senti
ment has been "entirely" with the
strikers. The same writer says
that abuses heaped upon the em
ployes in the works, are too dread
ful to print, and Secretary Morrison
of the American Federation of La
bor declares that peonage in an ex
treme form is In vogue at the plant
In the crisis of the strike, when
the state constabulary, ' troopers
deputy sheriffs and every other form
of authority were holding the strik
ers in subjection, the manager of the
company boastingly refused to sub
mlt the differences to arbitration.
About the same time 300 strike
breakers who had been employed for
few days at the plant, walked out,
declaring that the treatment they
received from the company was in
tolerable. In his article. Rev. Mr
Daris says of the strikers, "these for
eigners, on the cumulative testimony
of many years, have undoubtedly
been wronged in manifold ways by
their employers." He says "these
foreigners, perhaps, are somewhat
under the average intelligence, even
for the countries they represent,
and this fact has invited exploitation
by those who entertain no principles
against such a method." He says
"that while, the officers and man
agers of the company may have been
themselves Innocent of Intentional
tyranny, tyrants have certainly been
abroad among the workmen at
Schoenvllle. The bosses and
other subordinates of the company
have farmed these foreigners to the
farthest limits of personal profits;
even accepting bribes, as has been
averred, for the positions opened In
the plant, while darker Insinuations
and crimes unmentionable are bold
y laid at the door of those who.
whether foreigners or American.
should have been their natural pro
tectors and their enf ailing friends.
and thl writer adds that "they may
be treated often as btutes rather
than men "
And this is the war the Pressed
Steel Car company employs th
tariff to protect "American" labor.
There ought to be a permanent
tariff commission to Investigate such
caws, to ascertain In what way such
concerns are using their tariff con
cession, to learn whether It fa
"American" labor or no labor that
the tariff "protect." and with
propr prudence and discriminating
Jostle, adjust tariff so they will b
what they pretend to be.
prohibit on Sunday. The Jaw, the
court said, meant to prevent Sun
day games associated in the popular
mind with gambling and rowdyism,
while baseball "Is looked upon as
entirely devoid of these and like ob
jectionable features." It Is a
healthful, democratic. Innocent and
distinctly American game, the court
says, with an irreproachable past
and a clean and creditable present
reputation. Hence the court pre
sumes that the legislature did not
Intend to prohibit It. The reason
ing is rather strained, since the leg
islature said "all games," but' the
court took the right practical view
of the matter.
MAN.
nril Kmw- SBBBBSBMSBSBSSBW J I M TT J SaSSH
IF OMENS COSIE TRUE
Kansas has statute prohibiting
"ho racing, cock flgbtlag, fplay
lag rarda, or came of any kind, on
SBtday.- ruder which a fcaaeball
player was arrested, tried and eon-
T IS announced from many quar
ters that we are about to pass
into another period of car short
age. The railroads themselves
are full of apprehension and have
placed hurry orders for equipment
at all the factories. In this respect
there is reminder of the former
shortage " when there were not
enough workmen in the shops, not
enough steel and iron available, not
enough wood at - hand and not
enough factories standing to produce
even a fair percentage of the cars
and locomotives for which the rail
roads were clamoring. All this
time, and it covered a period of sev
eral yara, products decayed at sld
Ings, warehouses were bursting with
unmoved merchandise, trade was
stagnated because if deals were
made there could be no certainty of
transit, mills were closed and em
ployes idle because cars were lack
ing, and shippers almost moved
heaven and earth In the effort to
get relief from the disastrous situ
ation. It is a period that, while it
has its phases of prosperity, has fea
tures that commerce and industry
will enter with painful misgivings!
When two, three or four months
are -required for transit of a ship
ment from the east to Portland, or
when but oire car can be obtained
when a dozen or a score are Im
peratively needed, it is a costly If
not a disastrous situation. It Is a
period of which it is to be hoped
that the omens are wrong and that
the country is to be spared the
losses and embarrassments a car
shortage will bring in Its train. Yet
it Is a period that is likely to come
and go at intervals. The evolution
of the country and its strides in
production are far in advance of the
maximum railroad capacity. To fill
this gap between maximum railroad
capacity and maximum traffic,
James J. Hill said in the former
shortage that it would take an
added 75,000 miles of trackage,
colossal requirements in equipment
and construction and that It 1. a
problem that railroads would not be
likely ever to solve. And ho fur
ther said that it is of infinite im
portance to shippers and producers
to develop all the available water
way, as an adjunct to the country's
transportation.
Though we bad a warning In the
former car shortage, the Columbia
and Willamette ar much the same
as they were when product decayed
at siding and warehouse, almost
burst with, th merchandise that
could not get to market. Those
rivers, properly utilised, wbuld save
Oregon, from any threatened car
shortage. The enormous volum of
traffic that could b handled on
them would release many a car for
railroad traffic. Ia time we .hall
all understand what It ' mean, to
dally with th opening of the
river.
In the Woods. SeDt 6. Dear Wife
shot a deer yesterday. It was a big
one, and I would send the head home,
only when I got up to where It was
lying, 1 round that it waa our guide.
I tn Ink be ll be all right within a
couple of months but it would have
been a dandy shot if he had been a
deer.
Cam pretty near getting a mountain
lion the other night. I heard It snuf
fing around our camp about midnight
I crawled cautiously under the bed
clothes to decide what to do. - While
I wa deciding; one of the other tU
lows got up and chased it away. It
was one "of the horses.
How would you like to have a wild
cat skin for a rug? I v got a sur
prise for you. I saw a large bob cat
haslnar a raDOlt yesteraay ana 1 snoi
him on th run. The surprise Is that
he was our hound, Nero, that you have
been wanting me to kill. - j
Hjverytnmg in ine bouiihum. wum
like game. I shot 13 times at a picture
of a Red Raven Splits algn which some
pntnrnislnsr artist had painted on a
rock near our camp, I thought it waa
a bald eagle.
Will send you a. side of bacon -as
soon a our supply man comes.
Yours,
TOM.
In years gone by it was -thought dla-
f graceful for a child not to be taught
I A B CI and a few ml in ants.
Man on Povertv flat. 'JO mile from I rnetic almost a soon as It could talk
Pr ine villa, raised 1000 bushel of fine I out the trend of ' thought ha changed
ih1 0nVL?r',h'nd VerTy"r' n1 Stwwea, ai a 7ulk of .u'cane! fed thatTt tetWor th. childhl
each one better than It predecessor. SnyVanlrrlMted land. . cally and mentally if th question of
1 - . . . jeuucaiion is not taxen up so early. Lu-
Blesa th babies and what Is morel r. .1. .itinn t I ther Bur bank ha advised 10 year a
Important, give them pur milk, so that! Athini hive struck a flowing well at abln; the proper age at which a child
they will hav a fair chance to grow A'Trf 410 feet with a Opacity of 35 "hou'd th regular achool work
fnr 004 ft but confidence I felt 'n,ne, uewper Delineator, make th
that 'long ntLlF2&$r? SriiXffi? UUment bout ? '
the- well will become a gusher, in which yh"cVjO.0"n dtr-
OT.fif C,tr lllnBbt a the t7rm"hooiUilckne..' to describe ,
weu atso. , . a malady which is ven more wld
Th. numW nf - vlnltori at Crater Pread, I fear, In the new world than
that of lat eason. when all record that the more a ohfiS i fni 2
were broken. During the past month th r ' 'P,,,??
fully 2S0O people registered, and thl; JS? "xpoaed for 7;Avei tS
doea not represent the full number of f""",r;l ?.J.r JL:?71.yiTl0
At last an aviator has been killed by
a fall of his aeroplane. The wonder is
that such a piece of new ha been de
layed so long. .-
a
Plnchot and his Roosevelt conserva
tion policy may have to go, but this
will not strengthen Taft among some
millions of people.
Tha wife of a Chicago policeman says does not represent the full number otrni.'ffmnw rwmto
ha hu hlwn ilmnk mntlnnniKlv fn, th, .k... I., .k... t,ra .... tnanv I ,n Operations or tm doctrine, IS COn-
years. But what could she expect of a wKVllod" teVfftf thilr signatures to
There wers people irora -Tv-A.. .;X,C"1Z
Chicago policeman?
a
tlon was general that It would be the
. , , - .1 ,n n,i 1
most DODUinr act-nic aurwuvu. iu
the world within a few years.
"The. soboolmarm. like - th - lovina?
mother, is too assiduous In her atten
tions. The mother, coddling her child.
moaanraHlv lntTmminm 11m hAnn
The La Grande Chronicle tells of an death (as I hav shown in rjast Daner).
old woman, apparently 80 years old. and the teacher, seeking to lead It too
and feeble, who had to wait there over precipitately Into th Elysian fields of
' night on aecount of a washout east of knowledge, sadly overburden its brain
that city, and who, with scarcely any snd its eyes, Its lung and its muscles,
wraps, spent most of the night in the it back and its nerve. Th result of
depot, till, toward morning, ah was j this classroom forcing 1 entirely and
to a now ana given juua, mnu s-ii inevitaoiy- pernicious, jno good can po
hat day at the expense of th rail-lslbly come of it.
B way of a Joke it could be said
that the state dairy commissioner has
been handed a milk punch.
WHAT KILLED HIM.
Down in one of Nevada's mining
camps a prospector went crazy one
nltht and while apparently asleep he
suddenly leaped frosv his bed and dashed
out into tbeTiisht He ran but a few
hundred yards wnen ne toppled over
dead. The coroner was called, who Im
mediately summoned a Jury to deter
mine the cause of the unforunate man's
death. The examination lasted but a
few minutes and the Jury filed into the
room. "We. the Jury In this, here case,
find that the feller come to his death
by being Injured on tne spur of the mo
ment," was what the foreman, who had
once read a novel by Charles Garvlce,
announced.
Willie, sobbing, shook his head.
Didn't want to go to bed;
Papa smashed him Just in play.
Saying, "Willie, hit the hay'
T
Letters From tKe People
thi wor7rnT.U were PhP.. ha. ma-tered the sc..
The most foolishly, sillily scary thing unanimous In their expression of sur- SV..oVm.Vi
on earth Is a horse, or a woman on sight prls and omirauon, ana ine P" to grapple with germs.
i m. mouse except wau street, 'mat
take the premium over all.
, 1
And vet another: An Astoria bor shot
ms uroiner s iooi oil ana tne wounded
lad may die. Still, a great many fa
thers will allow their voum son' to
amuse themselves with gun.
a
Just a he got his SDlendid new home
ready to live in. Harrlman must nroh. I aeP?'
hi 1a. ... if. .ii .!-, I ent
rwAI'VS. lu" all that
apscters of wealth op nosition I road company, when, supplied with "The teacher, I suppose, I really not
specter or weaitn or position. I mnmm ,lmfftrt v. u firande jrnmon. I Cio, t .n .V.
. . she was sent on ner way. Her name were not behind her, egging her on,
O Say. COUld One see. br last snrlnar's I I. r-arllals n,1 h h heart llvlne-lts, I,., .Inl.lx n.l, .h. .,,k.
level . lleht. the flaar that waa left hv rolth mnn at Wnatnn- whn nn snnitins-1 ,M 1st InHnUnA. tUm. h.....i..t
. .r K . ""Jer wnicn on leav her to anotner son at Kansas tjuy, i purpose or mercy, A. it Is, she I ex-
i a " winning tne perilous ngnt. pel provided her, the La Orande paper says, l pec ted to convert the baby of i or I
. nini;u w ci ii in , iiutr nil nrnur inn i wttn nn I nwr nc.T und n it r Tfxx i uann inm a virrnnoA wir h a n ,.tan.
reminder? t'eary, say. did that blast- wraps. I slve repertoire of kindergarten arias;
tattered banner yet wave o'er that I a I i. th. iim. hii . i
cui iii-enu ww quni nas caused many A man who came to Lake county I she must have instilled into it a com-
a srHiti oy, feary. mat Drass tune from New Mexico two years ago. is I prehenslve grasp of spelling, arithme-
vui.u no iu Jim i uffi-rR run i nm.Adiiin- xvt 1 1 in rrv inn Ta.mim, re re.n i n cr wnnn M.vi.n nMiarnrv
i""uwni ror irienai mis pin s nreog tne ground nrt and piam sewing, xne motner or sucn
""J:" ' -wuum nave ueen to a depth or snout rour incnes. 2ie i a proniry is proua or its attainments.
then harrow the ground repeatedly 1 and feels a glow when, bored friend
until It is a perfect mulch. This work I hypocritically marvel. Later on she
Is done in th fall. In January or later I will wonder, why her child has watery
tin again plows tne neid as deeply us I eyes, constant coias or round snouiders.
tne plow oeam win admit.
about 1 Inches, and harrows it aalnj
wnen i is reaay ror sowing or plant
ing. The winter ana spring rains in
this way seep deep Into the around.
The moisture is thereby conserved, and
affords constant moisture for the crops j
rrom capiuary attraction.
nice, while to or from the cold pole you
wera Inwntlnv. Rut nn- nn tar ,
brass'tube was found there but indeed,
in a year they wer far otherwhere.
Some day, some far northern Eskimo, as
he cuts through the Ice for a choice Sun
day dinner, may find the brastcyllndeiv
or or -remnants tne glow or mat star
spangled banner left by the winner. For
lee. drifts and mementoes will move oth
erwhere, but the flag has .been there,
two brave men will swear!
FAMOUS GEMS OF PROSE
Vomen in PoliticsBy J. Ellen Foster
From an address before the world's
congress of representative women at
Chicago, week of May 15-23. 1893.
With tha growth of human brother
hood, and its necessary correlative, pop
ular government, woman, as a part of
glorified humanity and elevated with
Ha uplift, found herself side by side
with man; his helper not only, as , -for
merly, in things temporal, but his com
panlon in all things. Today all force
in human existence and human relations
have been exalted and refined. .. A far
removed as Is th beast of burden from
the electrician's wire, so far is th wo
man of th earlier years from her sis
ter of the twentieth century's dawn.
A the humanitarian idea has plowed
Its way through human history, woman
has developed wltih that idea, and now
her ..ner instincts, her keener intuitions.
and her patient heart are tha full com
plement of the robust masculinity which
has conquered nature. The two united
glorify humanity.
It I no longer a question of man or
woman, but of quality of service, and
or power to meet the world's need.
The Ideal woman is no longer the
paie, wnite my of mediaeval romance,
sh Is a living, breathing-, thinking, do
ing human being a well equipped help
meet In all life's activities. There is no
grander science than that of politics,
except the science of theology. How
uod govern th universe of mind and
hold in his hand the universe of mat
ter Is the grandest theme-the soul can
contemplate; next In dignity are the
principles and methods which control
and apply, human agencies to masses
of citlsen for th general good. Thl
1 political science. We Pity the nar
rowness which cannot comprehend the
dignity or this study; we are patient
wun weakness wnicn cannot grasp it
we make no answer to those who rldl
cule It; but wa give heart and hand in
patriotic devotion to th women who
reach out to know and to do large thing
ior me nome ana ror m flag.
Lettrra to The Journal' ahoold be wrltte ea
on aide af tha paper enir autf sHesld be ee
eompaiilad by tha Dams' and addrcea of tha
writer. Tha MM will not be saed If the
writer aaka that It -be wtttabejd. The Joaraa!
I not to be understood wa litra1of the -laws
or etit-ment ot eorreaponn-ats. IHtrra should
be nada it brief aa poaatble. . Those who wla
ttaalr letters returned whan not ssad should la
elnaa poatajre.
Correspondents are notified that letters ex
ceeding 300 words Ig lenirtb. may. at the dls
eretloa ot the editor, be cut dwa to that limit.
Sot Acquainted.
Salem. Or, Sept To the Editor of
The Journal Having read in your paper
of the third Inst that Fred Tiffany
had filed a petition in the circuit court
requesting that he be appointed to th
position of guardian over th property
of the writer on account of th neglect
of the present Incumbent, etc. A I
hav no recollection of ever having met
the above named gentleman and thl
not being the time and place to discuss
th qualification of guardian I hop
yon will kindly publish the few lines
and oblige. Tours very truly.
" A- O. RTAN.
A professor of ceology ia Chicago
University I. among tho who doat
bellev Cook's story, rrra though h
nay tI!er that th whal swal
lowed Jonah. II ra, "w all
knew long so that whea Cook re-
It Means Million.
Trom th Weston Leader.
Th trotoaed Irrigation ectemrlse out
lined elsewhere la our new columns
should be encouraged by th respective
communities of Weston and Athena by
very sneaa ta their power. Nothing
ver advanced has held forth brighter
promise of - prosperity to corn. It
mean small farms and many people tt
means in arte table produce . the year
round lnst4 of a wheat crop every tw
year. It cnen orchard and gardens
and alfalfa field a It means dairy In
and creameries. It mean a network of
electrte llnea, threading th galley be
tween sloping hills pereoalally grWs
with th cboteewt gift of Cere sjd
pnmitna
Poor land. Irrf gated. Is poor land tit
longer, . and produce profitable crops
of fruit vegetable and forage. Good
land, such wonderful land a surround
Weston and Athena, land already worth
$100 an acre" which produce never fall
ing crop of grain without the aid of
irrigation, would become Inconceivably
more productive wer moisture avail
able at the proper time. Wero It util
ized for alfalfa alone Its productive
value would be greatly enhanced. But
soon we would hav Hood River and
the Walla Walla valley looking to their
laurel with respect to fruit and ber
rie. In a very few year every acr
planted to apple Jn the neighborhood
of Weston and Atnena would command
a price of 11 000 or more, and every
other acr under the ditch would ad
vance to 1600 because of Its Inherent
possibilities; The remarkable land val
ue in southern Oregon woo Id be dupll
cated here. We have th oll; wo hav
rain enough already- to produce grain
in abundanoe; but the precious moisture
needed at a critical time to mak our
splendid country bloom and blossom as
ths rom th few extra, drops necessary
for successful diversified farming
these w hav not. and thl Irrigation
would supply, i
i ,i i in x -
Wot Very SmalL
From th Astoria Budget
Th -pack of canned salmon totaled
about SI 1,00 cases. Now a tt ton
of raw fish ar required for each loot
rases, th' canned . product represent
MM tons of raw fish, which at five
eent a pound coat t .. To edld
storage or pickled fish put p amounted
to H0 tierce of 10 pound each or
SSI tons of cored flab. Aa about en
third of a fish I wasted ta cleaning
and curing, tbe cold storage pack ef
40 tierce mean that I41 ton of
raw fish were used, a thl class oft
salmon brought seven cent per pound
or tit per tort. It represent a snoney
ealu of ltTt.100. Ia addition to thesv
thers wer to th neighborhood of tit
ten Of steel heads Shars- frosea. The
ruling price for these wss sfx eent pee
nnvr- er a total cf tSO.00. Thus it
wltTb e-n that the sunt of $1.17. TM
was upended by tb eannerle and cold
storage plant for raw fiah during th
season that' ha Just com to a close
and thl I la addition to th amount
paid ror labor in transporting the fish
to the packing plant and for other
classes of labor, as well aa for th fish
snipped to th fresh markets. .Certain
ly not a small sum to be distributed
within A apace of a few month among
tne laoonoi peopia or Astoria and vleln-
uy. . . a .
John Henry ttoyntlng's Birthday.
Professor John Henry Poyntlrtg, who
wa on of the presiding officers at the
recent meeting In Winnipeg of the Brit.
Ish Association for the Advancement of
science, was born near Manchester.
England, September . Its, and received
his education at Owen college, Man
chester, and at Trinity college, Cam
bridge. HI life' work bss been done
at Mason University college, Birming
ham, which he entered mm professor of
physics in HI0. He nas seen th Insti
tution grow Into- th x University of
Birmingham, of which h I now dean
of tn faculty of science. An extremely
Interesting piece of work that brought
Professor Poyntlng lato prominence was
nl weighing of th earth by means of
aa ordinary balane. Expressed In more
scientific language, he determined the
average density of th earth. Including
recta, atmeepnere, water and all that
goes to snake up It bulk. Professor
Poyntlng I th author of a aisiber of
standard text, book treating of elec
tricity, gravitation and radiation. ,
This Pate ta History. -
1$1 Largs section of Mobile, 'a la.
eetreeea ny nre.
114 Telegraph completed between
New Tern, and Alhany.
11(1 Thomas Hopkins Gallaodet, a
pioaeee- la the field of education foe
tbe deaf and damn, died1 In Hartford,
Conn. Bora ia Philadelphia, Ixeeniber
1. 1T$T.
1 Ml General CMttnden division ef
Roserrans army entered Cbattanooga.
114 Colorado foe the first tisne went
Dent or r tic
..111 M. slee Orerr. ex-reeel4er.t ct
Prance, died. Bars August It, lit?. I
"As a matter of fact, it seems to me
o be verv unwise to send a bov- or
girJ to school until the age of 8, at
least In America. 6 is the common age
for beginning with the three R', and
4H tne age tor kinaergarten mum
mery, but it Is entirely improbable that
this early a tart -Is an advantage, even
If the mere accumulation of knowledge
be accepted as the sole aim of educa
tion. The child which begms school
at S is far more capable! of learning
quickly than' the child which begins at
6; and at 10 the former is almost cer
tain to know as. much aa the latter,
despite the fact that one ha had four
year of schooling while the other has
had but half as much. And after that
there will begin to appear a noticeable
difference between the two. The one
will bear some permanent mark of Its
too early bending over desk and slate;
the other will be a healthy animal.
"Let me suggest' that the child be
kept from school until It Is 10. Let It
spend its whole time at play until it
is 8. and then let It begin to study
at home, either under Its, mother's su
pervision or In care of some competent
teacher. If It begins with two hour
a day, and proceeds to three and finally
four, it will be fully as far advanced.
after two years, a the child which
ha spent four years In tha averse
schoolroom. It will then be possible
to enter It, not In the first class, but
In the fifth, and It will go through
the succeeding classes with children
of Its age,"
4
Hear no ill of anr friend nor sDeak
any of any enemy. Franklin.
t It St
Peach Mangoes.
TAKE sound, ripe freestone peaches;
wipe, split and remove the pita
Fill the cavities with 1 finely
chopped tomatoes, grated with horse,
radish and mustard seed. Put the
halves together: tie each one- Pack in
jars and cover with a boiling syrup
made of two pounds of brown sugar
to on Quart of vinegar. . Seal at ones,
K ft $
Onion Sandwich.
4lJF TOU one eat an onion sandwich
I properly prepared, you will never
again turn a patrician nose up
ward at Its mention. For It nrerta ra
tion soak for an hour finely cut Ber
muda onions In Ice water which ia thor
oughly aweetened with Sugar and well
salted;- drain and mix with slightly
sweetened mayonnaise. Serve these in
round slices without erwst "
. m .aT
Mr. Rockefeller's Put ore Treasure. V
x run, iiu, Aiwnia vasiitlllIon.
Deacon Rockefeller talks of heaven
as If he owned It
(Coetrtbaited ta Tha loaraal K w.i. w
the laoxMU Kaaaas pnet. His Broaa-pnaaM ars .
a eetraur feature ef this avisos la the Pane "
Joana!.) . ,
. I stood on th bridge at midnight, and .
gased on th sleeping town; and th .
moon, ros over th conrtboase there
wa nothing to bold It down. 1 looked
at tn weary river, that bubbles, and
twist and eqalrma; 1 thought of th "
folk who drink tt snd fill their i.
Idee, with germ a How often. O how
eften whea I d settled tb water rent
fcd X found that th blamed collector "
had left me without . cent! How often.
O how often. In the dsrs that wer
gone by. I yearned foe a drink of
water, and fnd ell the hydrant dry'
So my heart wa hot and restless, and
my life i Ml of care, and t stood
on th brldr at .wildnlsht where th
rrpe eeuKda't hear Wis swear. Asd the
bridge. It cUared beneath an. ..a
fell with awful din; for the grafter
wbe bwllt strweture had fair-treted
o-r"t. rare be A -Owe
auu ataaa) UJzjJ iUftm