The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, April 12, 1910, Page 8, Image 8

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. THE OREGON DAILY JOUKNAL, .' PORTLAND. , TUESDAY EVENING. APRIL 12, 1010.
THE JOURNAL
AH IKDEfCNDENT NEWSPAMB,
8. JACKSON.
..PnbUabtv
I ulllahrd y arottlna trrl Sansal 14
rrrtf Imitlny tTiilM at Th Journal Build
I. , (Uita mai TfamMll itMII, Cacti.. Or.
Knlirrd at tb p-wtufrlca at Pwtlaad. Of., tot
tranamtaalua. UinMlt 111 Wall M SacOll4-claa
IM.I I'HONKS Mala TITS; riuaa, A-ftOM.
All Oxiiwiuwat rrarked 6y tbaa wminn,
Sell tli operator what oprtmat yo want.
loKKICN ADVKRTI8IN4 KRPKKSENTATIVB,
t-i.,ii'!i A hriilour l)o Biu-naarlrk nulldlus.
..." Hfio a.mia, N'.w York; 10074S Soya
Uuililn. Ihlofo. ,,.. f. ... ,
jjntwcrlprlon Trma by nail or to any soSrsa
u luiiea States, Canada at MuKt
. ' !: i . " .. DAILY. ' - ;' .V
C;s yr,....,.3,00 Dm pxmtk. ...... I .60
; .,.,- SUNDAY v." .l,;.
On yar fXOO I On ntti.,,...8 J
.; i ' VAILX '. AND UWPAX,'.':'i;--i"
One ar.,,.....S7.BO I Onssxmth.. .:..;..
f When you are- working for
man, occasionally 'ask. yourself
whether if you were tha, em
ployer' you would hire a man
ilka yourself. " It Is a aura way
of getting a mova on youraelf.
Beacha Magaslne, "
HOW SEATTLE COUNTS
stimulating tbe commercial and in-1 cllitated and effective railroad traf
dustrlal importance of this city, ! It I fie, but aha has nearly 4000 miles
la a view of Portland.' not entirely of railroad track to our 2200. ' We
new, but Immensely accentuated by I have been so poverty stricken In rail
reason of the standing and fonsplcu-1 roads that but four other atatea In
oua understanding of the subject by I the union have ao small a mileage
the man who uttered It" 1 In' proportion . to' population and
wealth. This la another, and a bow.
Alaska COAL ;;1vt:v: ertul reason for the activity, that Is
on the horizon.' an activity that will
rHB cOAlr deposits of Alaska are! shortly give .Oregon: a' new. life, a
auuwu m v9 , m yam volume i new importance and a new aspect.
: ana , immense vaiue. iJeyona
be right about that why are they,
.from Taft down, going to make such
prolonged , and , strenuous efforts
from now on to keep the country
from going Democratic.
this generalization nobody
knows bow much coal Is up there
or what It Is worth. Some of t Is I
said' to bo very superior anthracite
coal. The pacific coast needs coal,
and the Alaska' coal mines should be
SCARCITY OF FAHM LABOR
V -A. A a-' IJU44. A. U14 ' VbUOUB i BJJA It - IO
I nothing If not , enterprising.
Manifold episodes make it clear
that Seattle will literally allow
not one 10 escape the count, A re
turning Portlander recently told In
'The Journal that he, waa halted at the
railroad station ' on his recent de-
. parture from Seattle, and the effort
made to enroll him as a denizen of
that city. He only" made "good bis
escape by the final announcement
that he 'Is a citizen of Portland. The
'story, of this attempt to enroll a
mere transient was so amazing that
'It seemed past "belief, but confirma
tory evidence shows it to have been
true, f , ' k '
r "Another Portlander has been to
: Seattle. As he was leaving that city
, a - census artist halted him at the
;dock, shoved' a blank Intd hla.hand
and, requested him to sign his wane
to the muster toll of the sound's me-;
Itropolls. He demurred, and attempt
ed to explain that be was only on a
visit, but the census fiend countered
1 HE HARVEST time '.is far off
.yet, but even now there comes
a loud call .'from the country
';' for ;- more , help. , The great
developed, and this coast and the amount , of .' railroad building being
country should, have,; the benefit of I "lone In Oregon Is absorbing and will
their ( development: 'of their output absorb , for i a, year , or two tQ come
for consumption.' AH this coast. In- a, vast amount of. labor; and revived
eluding Portland, has always been enlarged and new Industries are ab
handicapped by lack of coal. 'It'll sorblng a. great deal more. ; IOBt
only in the Coos Bay region and In I l this labor has never been accus
Wyoming that coal mines of , any tomed to farm work, and doesn'
consequence . have been developed. I wish to engage In it, yet doubtless
and they, have furnished but a slight I the active and pressing demand for
fraction of the coal needed. There I labor in other lines has a tendency
are other coal fields In Oregon, there to make farm labor scarce. That
are large kbown deposits In tho Neha-1 this is so, reports from different por-
lem valley; but they have not been tlons of the Pacific northwest plainly
developed," Such development lai one snow., rrom Umatilla county, from
of the great needs of the ; Pacific the Yakima valley, fromUhe Walla
coast, and the big coal fields o Alas- Walla valley, from the .Willamette
ka ought not to be there unused. No-1 valley, from southern Oregon, comes
body argues for such conservation as I the call .of . the progressive," develop-
thls. Conservation that prevents de- tog farmers,, orchardlsts and flairy
velooment and use ' Is only a false I then for. help, for more hands to do
caricature. Invented by the cinemles I the spring work. r : . ,, . . '
of reasonable conservation and the The scarcity ot ; labor now, por-
supporters of predatory privilege. I tending a greater lack when i the
J A report states that by October 1 great Harvest comes on, wtu be more
one company . with coal lands i n or less or a .arawDacs; 10 aeveiop
Alaska will, be turning out BOO tons men t, and IS a perpetual and grow
of coal a day. If the lands were tog problem, f It will be ; partially
lawfully obtained even though the and 'gradually solyed,!. however; by
law was not what, It ought to have the process of dividing up of large
been -this company is to be com- farms that Is now going on, and the
mended for Its enterprise. It is do- increased immigration of -people of
ing a good work lor the Pacific coast small means who are willing to "hire
There are room and opportunity in out" for awhile may help -The only
Alaska for several,; probably.for many.! other means or solving the problem
such companies.- ." The government I seems to be-higher, wages to farm
the reasonably conservationists, cer- laborers, which might tempt some
tainly .desire to give those who en- to engage in tnis work and farmers
can now, afford to pay good wages.
Few murders ever committed in
the Pacific northwest had such ele
ments of cruel atrocity as that of
the Schula woman near Tacoma. The
person who did It is a rare "monster j
certainly "hanging Is, too good for
him." ,".- t " :-.v.
There are and always will be op
ponents of , municipal docks, of
course; but on investigation most of
them will be. found to have some
personal interest In maintaining pri
vate docks. '.'': ;.-v.
TANGLEFOOT
By Mdes OvcrLoIt
COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF I C
c
. SMALL CHAXCia
Census begins Friday be ready.
Joy ride frequently end in grief.
they're a
LULL 1 11!
Ill IVTA 11 1 I I
TATS(
i Mil KM
Mil l
LLJHv 1 1
1 AJW
r fe- .
Whatever others nut in in
reform by srolng dry. .
Don't arolil th nlnn.-
blanket asainst frost,
. -
. John IT. Smoke trrmi tn turn oana
enwreiy too muon amoKe, and of a very
The mora dlaaareeable aT ilufv th
k , Z aono ana ao goiien. ria or
PerhBDS Knonevelt will rofi, tvi
Kmperor William and that th
valine miumer row. : .' -, : . .1
jnere are timu that th m
be B good deal of a diuannolntment 1IU
iieaujr uv?riisea grana opera..
Roosevelt may not really be aa big
a man abroad aa J. P. Morgan, but he
attracts and accepts more attention, t
Beauty In a foolish woman, Solomon
said, la like a Jewel in a swlne'a snout.
Andmany pretty women are not wise.
Secretary Balllnger threatens to sua
Collier's Weekly for libel. Jt's aei;
"was a coi, Mann who did the same
mmg once. ;,.-;:. fJ..,,',s , :. ..
And they hike for tha
htlrltn mani
Date.'i i . .. ." '
Then thschlUy winds
blow, t :..-;': i
And cornea raia and
nOW . : h ; I Pn-vHrht 01A Ktx nMM..
The fliea ln.,ihtlTX:"'--'''.
: STARTING. TUB TLX VERSES.
I Now the 'first fly of
spring '
I To the. air spreads
. hia wing, v
i And he buzaes - and
lngs to his mate;
j While roaming about
I Another 4 thaw out.
OREGON SIDELIGHTS
. Many, land sales In Wallows county,
JMerriy will ty to bring In water for
irrigation. , : , ..
- Umatilla rounty la suffering from a
lauur limine. , . .
Mallv tnctm nt lunrl liplnir maA aitminil
LuiiBjf urove. . . , ' y.
Ttallrnnil from Orandri Rnnda vallpv to
wm waua aiso probable. ;
Tha Phoenix town ' "Jus-" hasn't "had
an oocupani aince it was ouuu
. ,... .......
Cottage Orove Commercial club hat
gained ibO members In a month. ' i
Probably Co tt aire Orove will Tiave
a Iioat it ne- Portland Rose Festival.
. r ,' ..." ' ... ,a a v, -.'', . . j
Over 100 houses ' were built in SI1-
verton within tha Daat vear And JtO
are building now. . j .
Pendleton ownora ' nt iuil.n4 ilnn
have aubHcrlbed for the apprehen-
alon of the poisoner. .. ,, r .
v
- The arrlcultaral dvnlonmnt which la
going on In Joeephlne county this year
surtasses anything in its past history,
says the Courlen, Thoueanda of acres
are being cleared of timber atumpa and
brush and the land put under thu plow
for . orchard, vlnevard or aeneral agri
cultural purposes. . - s
"Big Noises' of tke Days' News
PEMININE
1
. rH-aaing 0r l'err'Ct l
TliRnra la aornething i
about the notion of a
" vant. lie has been a
.with poeta and novel!
,J v. ... .
KlM'aklng of Terft-ct Servants,
very alluring
a faithful aer-
pet character
novel lata from the
time Homer , drove Kumaeus. the
devoted swineherd. , Sanoho , Panza Is
one of the world's heroes. The old
retainers In Scott maka un a -whole
army. "
But perhaDS it la hntfxr ' Avldenoe bf
the way auch characters anneal to the
great heart of the people to recall the '
method of common melodrama, "hot
with." . How often Are th hnrrM mAl.h-
Inatlons of the villain fmatrated by
the comic craft of the old servant,
mala or femalot How
only consolation of the desolate hero
llno in the affection of the low comedy
nurse t . : - ." . j , ... .
By Herbert Corey,
rage whnt
chops:
Coma on, boyat Who'll ' be the
flrat to straggle up to the font and
AO J .. th6 ,jladdeBt goi ratner y0u ever. ilX
P&Wfl -- I laa a I IS n at V rb MmAa Aitatatlei alviiit le
A . ftMA.n . 4IaI I "? ivii! Kiwiv vVOVnuu eew, k
vva u" I th A n nil wa m. rlATAn n mt Wsars a mm
clawi, I
kh.h hi wiall -mram 111.. with n.awM
, - . jj - ' 1 "i?" ...K.. TT ,vidl. Ktt. VIVVt.
UmtM n, . I r.
'-. .. , i i n... Tlr rw.new"fh,t't h wav
those touching missives ran and there's
a double meaning to the teuch "we
their
! gage In this enterprise a good chance,
a fair opportunity; and to make Jib
era! terms with them. But it is not
with the observation that, since the I ot$? few combined- capitalists whd
visitor had been in Seattle, it was ougnt to nenent from this great ngt
rightand proper that he should ural wealth ; all the people, to whom
stand up and be counted as a resl- 1 belongs, should share In the bene-
At loot M aa-1 fit. .That thev. shall do ho In a htch
fear that, the enternrlslne mathema- duty of government . Alaska should ot ledSer
tician would get him for Seattle's nt he Guggenhelmed.;
population In spite of all resistance,
D
. THREE CENT FARE
"tTRINQ ; MARCH the operation
of the Cleveland streetcar sys-
; KINO MENELIK . IS DEAD. "
If ytfu have tears; dear Christian friends, have Just named our little son for you,
For deatlT haa once VorV laid hi. hand "?h!!d" "1 ltuZc
' ; on Menelik'a hot brow. ..-..- I The woods are crammed with Chaun-
rrorn Abyssinia's : coral strands there eeys. dating from a period about 20
comes a wall of woe. , . I years back.' when Mr. DeDewran a rood
Old Menellk, king high he - was, . grim second to. Chuck Conner, for newspaper
a in na" ',a n,,m-JO?;; v L.. Popularity. Their god father accepted
- I Lnreh bold . his numerous honors In thosa days with
Whenever aulte convenient he'd catch !" " "!.
a vicious cold i second inolaor vto the -right pried .out
And kick, the bucket quietly without a j oy a epmpiete stranger. For a : few
" sign or tear; years no oraerea tne silver mugs Dy
He died in twenty languages and some- tha great gross, thus getting aut rate,
vr. tJ ".f Chi-aZnar;w ,i -AiA Then he became "Do Peach" and didn't
to save himaelt 7 - hav to eek the bubble reputation In
wnen enemies surrounded nun -He'd lay I . " v"-uu
. . I Aff 4 n aL ' aaa aa .- !F a aV v Jm aum J Ai.
upon in aneil ' . 1 v., , wmb. , iw uou mvneu m Try
His last remains for them to view, and I apogee of fame. Summer hotels and
, the Portlander, In sheer desperation,
i proclaimed himself . a t resident of
. Portland and beat a retreat
Nor was this all. Before he had
gone 10 yards, a second multlpllca'
tion table met him a"hd began an
even more
CAITAIN IIOBSOX'S EQUILIB
r , j RIUM 'J v, ' 1
whan maonli "- I frlfe bIaa avKn ak.jS na al Aa.a
tem on the basis of a 3 cent He stealthily would come to life and J gars were being named for him, and Dr.
fare showed a balance on the 'n;,e ?7,7,ida.- i.,um. iDepewrosed - to ; get- Into his, evening
ni tb lorfo-nr ttt,- Obituaries plentiful have lauded Mene- ciothe,aike a itre horae.- The aidewaik
arrangement secured as fruit of the But upto date the authors have failed JPwtatof s could a: him rush home
v,o.t-f r t v I to make 'em etick. - ' from the New 'York Central off Ices, tear-
nerOlC IlgHt made by 10m Johnson, 1 For Menelik. will not tav dad no mat- lnar off hl rollnr at h tuhtfl m th.
the company " Is ' to receive '3 cent .. ter how he tries, , j front ateps. Two minutes later, shaved
I
ri Zu "'"I": . to shed a tear ' next banquet, while hie lips moved ner-
iu uusigra, uB.ww mm m 10 co- Whan thv ,...m in mn. ( nA. f vousiy as ha rehearsed, the time -tried
unue in eirect. 11 not, tne fare will ' and pass around the bier,
be raised, not to R nnt hut 1 But go ahead and weep, dear ; friends.
e'en though you'd rather alng.
good things he had planned for the eve
ning, And then-
Well,; anyone who'll name a kid -for
fares, and If the revenues yield." 6 "iShTiSd'dies h-J(0?" oP dish,' He'd be
tV a 1 MnnaMM.a t . - I ITIfT PnOPlTfia TYt Ot 1fTtT rOMA la A A-.TV 1 .'. a-wva
iM a bftu&vn uongressman hod-
son declares that, the only way
to preserve th world's AnAllih.
ferocious demand for his rium is for this country to spend Dnng March, after ; iaytog all For Meneint ts dead again he's dead, Chauncey will earn that good gentle,
i. pedigree and Dtber een. I l4;OOO,60O . . year ."'and - t"rt cP"gea P6"" t inferest there Dut wlt& Btrlns- , man's -gratitude iust now that's all.
uuurw, a oingia uiouiu or operation
will not demonstrate the practicabil
ity of the plan, , but the fact that
his name was wanted and his meas-fin the present distribution of naval "I6 18 balance on the right side
urement desired for Seattle's coming power the Japanese could lahd 200,- luw cum m an encouraging rea
count. This , addfoar imnchlriA w 000 " men on our shores, eantnre ture'" the xperiment , The lower
Tares naturally increase the volume views with the senior senator from New
IIUHIIJ 0,EI,LVU.a W Ula IS 1 AVI O L11Q X Ul ly I " AVUH w J II HUUAU h bVU BUU AfaU,!" I I - r - . I. a,.
Zander eot aboard his vprspI a third more and lav a laree riart of th Of traffic, adding heavily to the Short And when he doe. apeak he will speak xork are simpzy ajirug upon, the jour
J.a!r ; a".a. ,JfB8 SlJ r. ,,aI. J"g.lZ",,.r A. Urlna whtb ara thA moat nmfltahi with the voice of tha people-that is, naWaUc ; market But he 1. a. deter
antecedents
sus data. Again the Portlander de- on super Dreadnaughts for the next
clared that he was only a vlsitor. but 10 years.- The proposition, focuses a
again there was vouchsafed the re- measure of. attention on Captain
ply that it made no difference, that fHobson's equilibrium. He says that
Even a little kid: for Senator Detew
Bay fitannard Bakev in the American a ca. doe. ean'arv Wrda. It ooata him
Magazine. - -la llttla more now to; get i good reading
It . I. safe to aay, then, that Roose-1 notice next to the' medicine ada. Some
velt will feel the pulse of the country I times he has to give a dinner to the
Drettv-carefullVT-there. at Oyster Bay xork state edltora incidentally throw-
before ha acta. Ha will hava out all ng IQ arfara to. Washington and
aorta of people to talk to him; ha wUl 1 ticket up the monument while inter
agent was encountered and -side-1 country, in waste. : Naturally, too,
stepped, an experience that leaves I they could levy tribute on Oshkosh,
the fugitive Portlander jto .believe lay siege to Danville, rout, the dt
that, if the visitors hold out in suf- vorce colony at Reno, hang HobSon,
.flclent numbers, the coming, census take Bwano Tumbo prisoner, , dis
will give Seattle a population of at perse the Balllnger investigating
least a million, ' , ' committee, tie Carrie Nation to a
. This returned Portlander is a sour apple tree, shoot up the insurg
. prominent local citizen of undoubted lng Indiana paltform, carry Dr. Mary
veracity and there is not the slight- Walker into captivity and v court
est doubt but the episode happened martial the Republican v Insurgents
substantially as related above. ; It for political heresy. In all this ruin,
all took place of course before actual I the one compensating thought is the
census taking began, and is an pre- certainty when these . marauding
" "V" l'""''" tA 1,1- h h. . mindlT lonilar aa aver Rnma of hi.
m i.A i. ..nt - t. i " jmv- i - - - . - .
yuaDB .ui uuiuB.. , n(m vmu- of hia L . - - 1 storle. used to be mlarhty ; aood. too.
able that more eyes are focysed on) And the people in this country are until the insurance ston? made a dimple
Cleveland than on any other city of progressive politically; they are insur- ut or ni. Dump ot numor. jsven then
itm aua in tha Wmntrtf an .H,Hn 1 gent against the old party rule against he ' was philosophic, r EVery editor in
-Aiar. . V vwMmmj. U UkVVUlilWU I A l t- J . I . . ST1. ... A J ., tlJ J , M . U .
' .a) ' .... - . f A1UI IVliiaUl M.11U "wlfcUIIUIliBlUa A JIOJT Dtl I nvKU U ' UBOU ' llfl OUI
cnauengea Dy ine conamons orougnt tor a more direct government by the text, until he resignedly .said one day
about by; ex-Mayor Johnson's extra-1 people, and - for a better government I "For 60 year. I wa. petter and for
by tno people, ana lor 'a, oetter govern i two year, i va . ceen pannea. consio
mental control of wealth. Th.ere are no jerlng- the ration of SO to two, it Is
two opinion, about this. . AJtd Roo.e-1 really surprising how fast the aise of
velt is also a progressive, by tempera- liny hat has decreased."
tnent, by conviction, and a. a political 1 The cranial enlargement was . what
policy. . Not long before hia admlnla-1 curdled Chauncey.. There waa a time
tration closed Congressman Gardner ot I when be was . the "best, fellow in the
Massachusetts headed a small commit-1 world to the newspaper men. Then he
tee to see Mr. Roosevelt and ask him I Was the royal panjandrum on the New
If he could no help the progressives 1 York Central, he sat at the, right, hand
ordinary work..
THE BRITISHER'S ADVANTAGE
A
PUBLICATION called the
Western Empire published -a
rate table for the British Post
al Guide which shows that's
t't British cmien can s
RlTnllflrlT rATlrflirun vlllirlAld Vfianlt "nntoln UAkAn f.v 41f ,. n11 I . - I At.. , : r . . n 1 .1 . ' . . , . .
, v, ..... .v.. v.D..j,, vsmu nuuouu wi5; wtu nun ii njijti from Nev- York 'to Rin I un " vumioiii uuunu.u a i waw toawari Danquetter. .. creaming,
to. paralyse the natlveB. t y J Victims to the ravaging and. festive nfA. fJMv.w.., .on-ln-law of, Senator Lodge.; The preavlhe wa. a olaaa. A lawyer and a big
make their winter quarters in Pitts-
A
eents.while an American would have i
annmni i. hurg; the grafting councilmen and rt t, .mi,h . a,aia
a privately bankers ? there ; will ' sneedllv have tZ.'ZZriV' r'"
made, by John F. Stevens was, " 7.ni.t .iit. rT- 7i, v company nas a contraci'Witn
TnJ,A ,- aAa u- them in financial straiu; or, if they tha firItjBh rostofc denarf mAnt tn
, w kuu to weauueu iu im mo i ... a Aa 1. tir.1i I ' - -
. . - . .... W1'V iu !wi vimH ui i. (I , Anam tt a a V,ta. n.l.
coast" 6When r.Steven. "1 bt our own postof f tee deVartnR i
tlon was called to the rapid growth
and the possibilities of San Francisco
and Los Angeles, he reiterated his
declarationwith emphasis. ; X Vs t
Here is an opinion worth while. In
preparedness for a view as to the
relative possibilities of coast cities,
so man is more competent, few are
as wfeU equipped. ; Mr.: Stevens is
one of the most famous civil engi
neers of his ' time. sfr As bead of the
Panama canal be was chief 'of the
greatest engineering project in . all
history. He has 'been, and still is, at
the head of great undertakings. He
knows the forces and factors that as
semble for the growth of a city. His
education, capacity ' and bent have
brought him in close touch with big
facts. - His study of the Pacific coast
was prelmlnary to a great investment
of railroad capital and was undertak
en with that Impartiality with which
great captalnspf finance invest their
money. There was no reason for
Portland to be" adopted, except on
its merits, and yet aa a result of Mr.
Stevens'", expert survey; of the Xleld,
Portland was selected.
Mr. Stevens gave reasons for the
belief that Is la hint , Ko other city
rn tbe coast is so favorably situated
for the strategy of transportation.
Iery other city is reached -by
r ountaln climb, an obstacle that is
fixed and unalterable 1b the issue of
nodern railroading. No other city has
n vast an erpanse of tributary "re
( i a. Frsm eastern and central. Ore-
n, liaho, western Montana, cast-
'i W ashington and w.tem Oregon
S. a dawn bill pull ta Portland. and
! r tWe logic of economy the traffic
' i-t rorre to Portland. At the door
: i : rny ic frrai viuey cr
- v"!ir;ett. a 'regfe-n ttat will
"C, f :tr an enornous pop
- 1 4 At ::! f.-"d and trade with
. I t t t e a bsTT
- !Lr- Th rx.Uk txzz-X- fa J
or' rmerniTioiil tnalr'na nn anxh .
soon make every diabolical Invader ... ,. ,
u -.. - v,.v I " -0 u '"i"ok. vi. I tne element or noise in tne snoD. w
W ;r u. ' mi! American people; This publica- eliminated entirely, but when each
would restore the worlds equlHb-1 tjoa , says: . "We are blushlnely ch,B equipped with noiseless t
ident said to him: fdog In politics. And the nlaht waa never
-uaraner, you ana a are in mucn ine too raw to keen Mr. Denew out of a
same position,: Tour father-in-law and first page column and in many cases
my soa-in-iaw uuin awrovo ut ua ma-1 purely because he was a aood fellow.
icala." , , . , .- . I Many of his most brilliant thoughts
have been delivered to some poor devil
Making Machine Shops Noiseless?. I of a space writer, -while Mr. . Depew,
i FrOn, Electric News Service. . . enivering tn hi. pajamas,-paced up and
Art-mtk tnr maahina . yiia 4. 1 down a cold hall. He knew that Inter
doing much towards making tha machlneTl?w nfht be a key to comfort tor bis
shop noiseless. It la aot probable that j interviewer. 'And then ha. began to
the element of noise In the shop. wiU alfmnc' ne moving in wni wimam
v ' I aTa1 a (uk - 7. a -a. . a.M . A 4A.u .. a A .
I wiouu Lrwinwwi yvnrm M-itejrwaru, in
I
speaking of E. H. Harriman, described
save this country a lot Of Ushamad ftf IU MnrZ ..J lrl by a noiseless motor It is I mysterious world in which wa
I asnamea or the congressmen and I .Di,.rent that moat of tha noiaa will il way not enter. ;'-'-''sv.-.:-'.--v ;,;.- hs ;
building. . I aanatan . whA 'nmfaii ka,1ta,M 1 aPPren:. n1 mn n "MM ::,--, ,pMvi',.:;M r ;.-tv.w
rhA .nisede nrvot tf i An-e kA I ri ..... -j... " . . .. 1 They Drint what we tell them ta9
AX Ua BOTTLED OREGON 1" " iZT' , lilZlMn ihon. hTn .r.ninV Also-tbey printed what he told them
company, for five years or more bumJ-m.AtS
rium and
costly shipbuilding,
CHAUNCEY MITCHELL DEPEW.
This sort of thing is very popular on
the stage but In the cold air or. v,r
practical Ufa It has been known to
paJL , A servant too affectionate con
ba rather a nuisance. A servant ton
careful about you can be more than- a '
llttla tyrant. The old retainer some
times . has too good, a memory of tha ..
days when, master or mistress wan a
child, and is apt to preserve, the man- '
ner ,. appropriate to that relationship, i
But,' upon tha whole, it It not auch .
minor troubles as these which we have
nowadays to fear. '.; -v ! ' :
In , the ' bustling, hustllne. modem
world there Is little chance' of our re
lations with servant, becoming' too per
sonal. We are much, more ' likely to '
lapse into a habit of treating them as
machines, which they ; naturally repay
by the same cold, limited service a
machine renders. . What Is the perfict
servant? We had a suggestion In Mme,
Stelnheil'. 'trial, when Marietta Wolff
thus aummed up the whole duty of
the world below stairs: "A servant
should see everything ; antfi say notii-
A good many 'people will -xvrotest '
hastily. The command to say nothing
is well enough, but they have no de- '
aire to encourage a servant to see
everything. There la so much in the
most respectable life which I. not In
tended for publication. . But If " you '
wan to be absolutely private, tfi only
way i. to aeep no servants at all,
With the ' least' curious of maid, or
men about the house they must see
much, and ; If they have Intelligence
enough to be good servants, they will
infer a deal more, f. Moreover, If . you
want to be well served, it Is desirable
that they should. "
we may not go the whole way with
Marietta. It 1. not deairable that a
servant should see everything. Omnis
cience Is not safe for any human being.
mo one wno: wishes to remain a com- .
fortable human being would seek to '
posses. It-, But your, perfect ' servant "
must know enough about you and' your '
ways to be able ' t anticipate your
wishes Snd your actions; That 1. the
Only way to secure a household where
everything run. smoothly. a '
The Admirable Crichton . of ; service
must know even more than this. Ha or
she needs an understanding of the man
ners and cu.tomS, emotion. : and tem- '
per. of the ordinary gnests, of master '
and mistress. How I. this to be gained
without watching tha behavior ot mas
ter and mistress in company and after -the
company Is gone T The sad . truth
is that Jf you .will have good servants . ;
you ' must : let 5 them into . your confi
dence. - Whether fflat I. worth- while v
Is a question for the Individual taste -
At his best he was' a . wit, a brilliant
writer, something of a .nob, and a good and fancy
lawyer. At nia worst he wa. but the
jright hand of more powerful men, and We are not . to forget
naa.Deen boosted into popular riwor be-(Clause in this -brtef M theory as -to, the
causa ne lurmsnea a r woria or gooa I wnoie auiy oi .ervania. "Aney are not
copy. He really set a stylo in speaking, i only to see everything, but . to say
when Depew was a boy, m FeekskUl, I nothing, xou sleep better if you real-
N. T., the man was esteemed the best I lo at once that this is a council of
the other"
he recalled with tears in
T, IS MANIFEST that the day Ot JS .?? ?? m0t! ioli aff- ihV wortoea," Wf tornado that fol-
a bottled Oregon is passing. Fori-' v-u, u, wui fflfflaoit to hear -instruction., besides jrtM":.A,?"
20 rears, the state was nrsctlc-M111 reign government". . baring a marked influence upon the Wl things .aid or mm
aTlv wfthont raiTroad bniTdlnr. A -The British postofflce department S"' "0.?""" .ww produced.
few minor extensions comprise the look. t for British subJecU In this u''StJ!
whole story of railroad development coun"7. nd, protects them even tation. ventilation and similar matters
during that nerind. Bnt It la annar- Tom , the 'rapacity . ot Our express which were thought unimportant a few
ent that we are on the threshold of companies. , as long as a man In this now, oneo a necessity the "Great Compromiser." He waa one
I rTLwlA iV toner circle, ot country is Britisher he can get this rT UtM "5 TK, StrV
v ,1 u. .,.vi I reasonable rate. If ha .thooiM ln .w .....,: i.,.- ,..'. '.!' political history -of our; country during
Liies ranruaii wui iu bliiuw i iikl whuiu - : - . vt alii nuuiraa aiiauia aaiira i ignmnsr i tu. at .a k-ir . m a. . aaHnn i xiat
the next few years at least two andchanKB hls nationality and become a I belts, displaced by modem wotor drive, L aiaguia winoidenea this figure,'wh
orator who could tear the most stars
out of the aky and set them twinkling In
tn. national flag. Depew told .funny
stories and kidded his audience. . He
turned the tide of a campaign whrn he
referred to a, candidate as reminding
mm . oi: ; ' ...
7'The small boy he had seen wander
lng among the children', graves in tha
cemetery at Peekskill, eating green ap
pies and whistling; 'Nearer, My God, to
xneevi
And he -always has nreserved a-de
lightfully youthful point of view. Most
men born In 1814 are old: Depew isn't.
except as the yellowed page in the
family Bible shown. That hnuaa , in
Peekskill where he flrat-saw the light
had been in the possession of hi. French
Huguenot family , for more than 200
year. v He had hardly graduated from
Yale than he took an active Dart ln'the
national Ampaign in 1868, and he has
never missed one asses. , After holding a
state office or two he became a cor
poration attorney, and for more than 80
year, was the personal representative
of the vanderbllt Interest..'- For -88 day.
New- York Republican legislator, voted
for him for United States senator, until
he . withdrew to permit the election- of
Warner Miller. , Then he tried to get-
rloh-quick,. . and the trouble he had
dodgei all fell on him. He went to
the senate in '1901, and his senatorial
record consist, in having stayed there
since.. Tillman turned tha table, on him
during a ruction In the .enate by dig
ging up ona of Depew. own stories
of the clergyman who had officiated at
tha funeral of a spiritualist During
the - funeral the spirit of tha deceased
spoke most unkindly of the sermon. "I
forgive him said the sky pilot calmly,
VJn all my experience this is the first
time I was ever sassed by a corps. '
April 12 in Hisiory-Hctxry "Clay Vs J V, I
the impossible. Tha human being is
not yet made who will say nothing of!
wnat amuses, interests, or annoy, her.
If you suppos that your servants find
you - neither annoying nor ,. interesting
nor even amusing, you s.re to be con
gratulated on a superhuman and gulte
useless modesty. - AM 'you can ,C hope
for'is that they will say nothing hasty.
Provision for that contingency la in
your own hands. For sad and cruel as
the . conclusion 1 is, there la no doubt
about it; you will never get the per
fect servant till you ' are the perfect '
mistress. - -
-. ' i: S Si t ;,. v.
, Chicken Hint ,
TJY a chicken a year old as It will
be twice. tha size of a young one ..
. the . same price. Boll aach piece :
In flour, and a lace in earthen cooking -
crock, sprinkle with salt.. almost cover
wiia boiling water. Cover crock- tightly
and cook .lowly, from two. , to three
hour. The alow baking Improve, the '
flavor. For th second day '.Ilea all
the meat from the bones. Slmrar the
bones with seasonings, strain and add
the left cVer gravy for the broth for
noodle soup. Cook a cup of rice in boil-'
lng water until dry and tender, add to
mato saucV left from day before. Una
buttered patty pans with this, lay In
the chicken, cover with two tablespoons .
white sauce or gravy and bake 10 min
utes and the last meal of . the chicken
will be better than the first - . e .
B
Today Is the birthday of Henry Clay,
Possibly a third transcontinental linalCIUlea OI tne. united states, rre be-J 7'" " "ra f"vs ot m. noie was destined to become ao, important a
Iri h-,a t , comes subject to legalited robbery 1,n and most of the dan- national figure, was bonTon April 12,
wUl be added to those already In r",r .mn,il. . ,7 'B' -reater Ught and removing hit. only a few miles from .the -ld
Portland. The horizon la full, of W tn "press Companies, Whose In-1 the .train on tha ear drum aiwf nervaa n.-. irthi, l. vii. v,.,.
omens to this effect: and "one see terests are of greatet importance to
them more clearly than the captains ?nr govern meai man tne people s.
of the trunk lines already here. To
the latter. It 4a tha logic of railroad
strategy to enter and occupy every
available section of the local field.
Extensions must go where a traffic
can be built op, snd cannot afford
to wait for tfi country to be devel
oped. . Hesitation would give the
BAD ADVICE
which annoy and delay tbe worklagraen. I the aplendora of Patrick Henry, genius
first beamed forth. His education waa
Taft Serves PTiTeleare." . I derived from tha poor district, schools
L1
Ray fitannard Bakef. la the American ot eje neighborhood. Hla father was
Ma In , quotes a prominent western
ET US have no more bonds, no
more debt spend no more
money, says the Oregonian, al
though the city is gaining la
population, by tens of thousands and
in Wlth Th tnlTTlAna It. T -t
coming transcontinental competitors . .," l" j .
epportunityror Joint occupation, an
occapaiiou mil uom aireaay nersi,. i. .,..! ..a , .
-ii K.i , ... 11 to extremely and Imperatively
logic of this sltu.Uon w. b.v. on rvTA: 1
.wua, oiue, can m ran a sec
every band a railroad activity such
as Oregon baa. not sen in two de
cades. Lines already building will
comprise a mileage of greater extent
than has been built in the state dur
ing the period, and this is but a frac
tion of tbe extensions and cross ex
tensions ws are to see. .
It is a development long over dnex
Wastlngtonr with . 1 resourres' no
greater has almost double our rail
road mileage. That state has no
center, such as Pcrtiaxd, for a fa-
' ' . -
and Ios Angeles are not going to
stop or Stand eUILT Or hesitate about
spending millions oa aay matter so
important as the acquisition ot naa
niclpal docks. It is bad advice, a
wrong policy. This city to fulfill Its
proper destiny mort not bait now,
must not balk at this bill. -
a . clergyman . with slender . worldly
mean a, snd Henry waa Coarnalled to
accept a menial position In Richmond.
There tha extraordinary powers of his
Intellect began to develop, and .at tha
aga of It be was prepared to begin the
study ef law.
Cloa application and a retentive
memory overcame many difficulties,
Snd Clay was admitted to practice at
the ag of 29. From this on he rose
with rapldltyto a seat in the senate
aad there, tn a short time, developed
Into one of the greatest statesmen of
his age. His term of eervlca in the
nl. waa hrnkti rlnu .
able t aa this everybody except I rears, during whlcj time he eerrtd as
Br'M " mpign or Tsrt weiserratary of state under John Qulm-y
wera praaeoted With tha spactacl of a 1 Artama - Ha waa twlra
roan wha waa Supported by the prtrt- the office of prld-nt, but waa.de-
legea intereata n tbe tbeory, perhaps fted. rirst by Jarkaon and then by
tbe knowledge, that be would not carry Itlk. 11 waa a memher of tha een
eut the rrofntf. waa making r per- ate when fie died In Washington on
mining fcla fr!'ds snd tpotiorm to make Jan it, 15 2, at the are of TS.
for him. Kottlag more cyntral, nothing Few. men have been 6 deeply
more dr-rradire has aver bea wra la mourned by the whole nation as was
American polities. And Taft la doing Henry Clay. The solemn funeral pro
Joet wfcat 1 expected him ta do, namely. tnon. paased through various rltl
erring MS master. PrtTllea-a." 1 of the north before crocalrr the AL!e-
ahenl; and. sa It anored ts tha miurn-
Rrpublicau aa follows:
"Taft has been exactly what 1 expect
ed him to ba. He was and la a conserv
ative and . reartfonary. and It . should
have been plain to everyone during the
campaign last year that about the big
gest dub co game waa being worked oa
these people that had ever been at-
tetnpud. With Rooaeretrs ladoreemaat
Tart appeared in tha west aa a radical.
and yet he waa enthusiastically aunnort-
d by svery conaervaUTa, by every re
actionary, aaa y an tb rrivlleged In-
Everybody abould hava ben
Bnt if tha Repobllcan leaders
It latr ff nM V. - -M . v , -
vtt m uu icing iort
r,rtT. fr the country to goj T rtni r Oa-r Is It yrrJ, "''C the r14n- of sorrow ahnvn
DeroocraUe next fall atd tier can I"1 T ln tv, t:m " ia br th "t '"wds that rthrrd b-
waS held.' ' . - - - v. . - .
- A. a parliamentary leader Clay has
no equal in American history. "As a
party leader," saye Elson In hi. "His
tory of the United . States." "ss aa idol
of the people, he stood in the highest
rana; ana, indeed. Dut three men In our
history Jefferson.. Jackson and Blaine
can be classed with him in this re
spect". Clay has been called the 'Great
Compromiser," though ha was author
of but two compromises In his long ca
reer; flrat that of 1831 on the tariff.
and, second, the compromise of 1150.
Clay has often ben called the author
of the Missouri compromise; but aside
rrom tne second compromise, concern
ing the admission ef free colored ppl
into Missouri, ne baa no more to do
with it than some of his poHeagues. j
waa tn rrmars rt a aist!nsrulBhed
" K It M
"Almond Sponge. , ; i,
A DELICIOUS almond- epong. 1.
made by oooklng two cupful, of
milk- with a quarter cupful of corn
starch until the milk thicken, and then
adding four tablespoOnfuI. of. sugar, a
llttla salt cooking ten minutes, men
adding the stiffly beaten whites of
three eggs and a cupful of ground al
monds. Serve with -a custard mad
with the yolks of tbe eggs, four table
spoonfuis of sugar and a cupful - of
milk. Cocoanut may ba used Instead
of the almonds. .
.. AJmir'aUe Cficlitoa
(Cootrlhoted ta la Joamal by Walt Mason,
tb famous Kanaas poat. Hia araat ara a
r(ilr tratare ( ' US eulsBXa la Sa laUy
jwaal) - ..N , : .L
They tell about a wondrous man who)
died era you were born; and I belleva
tha tales I've hyard about him In '
horn. They sy thla gentleman excelled
In everything be trl-d; and he coulj
write a lovely ode, or pierce a s Words
man's hide; or plan a sr or kiss a
cook, or stn a serenade: h was th
aana I or that Mr. Clay's eloquence waa i glory of his sea; when can hia glory
absolutely InUnrtbie to delineation;
that the in oat labored description could
not embrac It; and that to be under
stood It must ba seen and felt He was an
rator by nature;' Hla-esgl ev burned
with patriotic ardor, or flashed Indigna
tion and definanc . upon Ms fos. nr
waa suffused with tears of commlsera- f
uon or of pity; and It waa b-caua ha
felt that he mada others feel.
A gentleman, after bearln ana nt
hia maamlftceiit efforts In tb' aenatA.
thus describes fcim: ."Every mnarl f
tb orator's faee waa at work. His
whole body seemed aantated. as If -h
Part was Instinct with a rsrat tf;
and his small, whit tand. wiih Its blu
veins arpareotly dlsindd almnat
ourstmg. ntored irrcr(ily, hut with all
fads? with all his skill Iv nfver
heard of snythlng hs's done that hflped
to brighten up th world or cbetr a
weary one. Th Crlchtons do not cut
rhurh grass outsld th poet's pare; th '
world Is wanting specialists In thisrr
sale age. Don t try to larn a gross
ef thlnra. to make a.lmlrers ril; to '
learn one thing Is quit erougb but
trirn'that fine thir.g well. 11 rathr
build a wall of mud and do tbe ) i
up brown, thin hav a ld in every
trade that s tumirir is tt.e town. Fof
men who faor waiis af mid soiU
how well I wrctht snd when
thy'r wanting walls themlTa they'd
hire me on the spot Ko o'l'ls how fanm
Me be your task. If you frafca up ru
pilnd to du"tt litr thsnlwas dr.r
the enrry ef rapid and vehement -- ' ,B a'.Lthe years brid, th wnrid r.
tur. The srparanc f tha trMk,r i about your k,:l wi;l knew til
mad that of a por inte.'lect, wj-oti r h t ' T"a eic!; so Warn to so r,a k'.4 cf
up to Its Bn!htlett nrr(, and brient- 1 ttir.g. ar.a lra I oa It wr.L
j amnir-a; ifn-Jin ie tnin anr trans-
-m i.i t aa estimated IH0.
(ttkened p. love In t:ch the derased
parent Tsi cf ti't that ifiytvl It -