4 THE OREGON SUNDAY- JOURNAL, PORTLAND' SUNDAY MORNING, 'APRIL 17, 1010. THE JOURNAL Alt' INDEPENDENT NEWBPAPSB. C. . JACKSON. .rsbUaaar I'ubtlshad tnn tmlm leirrat Base?) and ewy rnndar B-rnln at The Journal - fn(. Flftk and Xamnlll streeta. roruaao. w Kntered at tha poatofflce at Portlaad. Or., for rrantmlHtos lonMuk U auil a aece-laes lKI-EPHONES Unfa TlTSl RoBM. A-S051. ; All department raaebad by taaaa asoibara. iu tbe operator what. separtaa roa want. KIREIflJI ADVERTISING RBPRBSSNTATIVH, Brnlnmln A Kantnar rin . Ruruwlrk Bulldin. 126 Fifth aveaoe. Iw Tork) NKfl-oS Boyae bubirrtptloa T.rma by man or to any addrras la tba United Stauta. Casaoa ar afexioat . C:a ear..,....ai.oo I Om swath.. ,....f 0 Ooe raar........t.S0 One evwth M .;rl-:: - DAILT AND SUNPAY. v On Tear. ... .:..tT.M 'One' BKmth ... .f OS , To have superfluous amount' - of body a calamity. You can't check It it tha parcel stand everywhere, you go you have to lug It. For that matter, to own . any .mora of anything than you, can use 1 a disadvantage. Any- thing you own, which you can't use, owns you. . The orator who can -not dominate his audience 'la -dominated by his audience. , 80 there la always a fight between ' a man and his body If he does not dominate It,1 it will dominate " him.- .'' Use all. the body you have or .lt will use you. The Frs. .a dally, and cannot fail to have effect on the. volume , of Immigration to tola tte. ' :'' i,: At last Oregon ia being opened up. Tens of thousands of square miles A .at . a a a I a t . . . . . '..'!. ... . story, ot me oia, 01a game in .some 01 nome ue are prougnt up to ridl- ducibie from Bryan's remarks, lie slightly modified form. . . , cule. , : . ; . did argue In 1896, and since, that ; uuuuorc piayea me races 10 a hot .. me vauaevuie nouse is crowded, 1 1 no value of mouev and the nrlc of 11.11. ' no orew rrom mo unensuurg wnen tne legitimate nouses are starv- commodities denended lare-elv nnon L.i. at A AAA m a. , I 1 m . . . . .. . I . . ... " uann. mo iv.uvu nis iwm orougm. mg ur patronage. . me inters ana tne quantity . of money In circula producing settlers are being made accessible, available for homes. Tbls Is particularly true of the great cen tral and southeastern Oregon regions and will be true also of the south :A DANGEROUS rOSSIBILITV ' SUNDAY is a good day for aober ref lection. V: It la' an auspicious moment ', with I, ample time to consider soma . matters bearing on the common welfare. It la a fit ting hour for the citizen to take a glimpse at what could happen in Ore gon it a man unfriendly to the initia tive and referendum should Jbe. .elect ;d governor. JThe memorable fight tnat Governor Chamberlain . made with the legislature of J905 over the emergency clause on pending bills is unforgotten history. That fight with the ls8ue.it presented is the basis of a tremendous state Issue at the present moment. In that session al most every bill' introduced carried the emergency clause; and as the citizens of this state know, or ought, to know, the emergency clause is a bar to vs6 of the referendum. Any act that carries the emergency clause is beyond the reach of the referen dum, and is therefore - beyond the reach of the people in any desire they may have t veto It. All this Governor Chamberlain pointed out in a ringing message, in which he declared to the legislature that measures presented to him for signature must, except in cases .of actual emergency, have the emergen cy clause omitted in order, that the people, in case they bo desired, could invoke the referendum. . , 1 - What If a man unfriendly to the referendum and initiative were elect ed governor? . The question is one of tremendous import to the citizens of the state. . Such a governor-in coi. lusion with the legislature could paas measures with the emergency clause attached, those measures would be come the law; and no power of the people could intervene to prevent. In effect, the referendum would become inoperative and as null and void as though It had never been passed. The legislature and the governor, could repeal the direct primary law and restore the convention system In all Its glory. They could repeal the cor poration franchise tax, law. the cor rupt practices law or any other of the many excellent measures that have been passed by the people, and no power in the" hands, of the peo ple could check them In their pur poses or arrest them in their designs. They could ''put the knife to Btate menti No.t 1". with a vengeance, and we have the Ill-advised declaration hitherto' practically unavailable td and the confidence men got it u The rqers, testify that. the show; pleases, j tion, and that one trouble during the uirerauoni were in a pooiroora uu curing me ; ween ot t ins , Destiai i narq times in, the nineties was the to.rld themselves of their ylctlnv a Apache dancer, billed'as f'Ma Gosse,"! Insufficient aupply of. money. His fake raid of the place was made by at one of the local houses, even the) opponents their denied this, and rldl- meir, associates -ana ; in tne i iiigni manneea were sola out in advance, culed him on account of it, but now uuiiDert was given a ticket tor u xne dance is indicative of all that Is they , air admit that he was riaht western,' northwestern tvnd coast re J Angeles and hurried on' board a I lowest and most vile in the life of Bryan merely mentioned this fact riuub. vregon win grow more in tne 1 irain. m;rore uo reacnea nis aesuna-1 f rencn scum ena consists Or aland said nothlne at all about fr next i years than it has grown in tion, gleams or tae truth began to waiu,-featuring brutality and Inde- coinage of silver, which he sees as me past wi?.; m i : I pwwiraw mm, ne maae a connaant 1 ceni postures, jjootn Tarklngton says well as any one.is not now necessarr As often .occurs, in a region long of the train conductor, the police were I that-? American audiences are 'the f r ' ' ' r rallroadlesa.' no sooner dot rt ett f canea in. the hunt for the crooks is f most immoral In the world, because -- A nrofunnr: thA tTnivi.i .i one than It gets two. , For a decade J on nd the rancher, plucked and pen- J they v so definitely showed their dis- Michigan suggests dueling as a sub- tne late Mr. Harrlman keDt Interior 1 neni. snearea ana Baaaenea, muBi i ruppointmeni wnen an artist and a etltute. for football Tt mieht nnt h eastern Oregon bottled up. would not I 6 begin life over again. ' 1 ; ,; j married countess in one of his re-1 so dangerous, and the scars received build and tried to 'prevent: others !;; His" story should be told to everyjeent plAys refrain from Indulging in might be mora 'attractive.' but -'duet. from building. But no sooner had! boy in the land.. Somebody ought to the misbehavior which they so bit-ling as a national college game could he started to build up the Deschutes j have told .him about ; these; things I terly object to in others. ur. ' be-objected to on grounds that will than Hill, seeing that Harrlman at! when he was a boy. .Or, what Is bet-1 ' This comment. is the result of at-1 readily suggest themselves. This is last meant business. Jumped in and I ter, . he should, long ago have aub tending a'. local vaudeville perform-1 not a dueling age or country. This built, too. -Now Hill.havlng decided, 1 scribed for a good newspaper and I ance and sitting in the vicinity of J professor seems to have attached a . a : a..j.-a.aaai'i" ...aA. ... 1 .. I . .. . - .a . . 1 . . . .. m I a a accoraea 10 reports; 10 Duna an east 1 nave reaq 11 careruny. in us mir- poopie .w no were aisiincny oorea un-1 nimseu 10 me wrong university; that and ; west line from - Ontario to : A1-j rored reflection of the world's doings j til a - drunken woman " of coarsest at Chicago is the favorite field 'for oany, nis great rival is preparing, it aany recounted, ne ' would nave 1 grain -was portrayea in one or tne professional cranks is said, to parallel this line also. I learned now others berore him nave sxetcnes. . men tneir enjoyment and It- , ... ' ; And both will build into all parts of I traveled the gold brick route and he 1 applause recognized no limit. Strange ' Representative Polndexter' of the eastern Oregon where sufficient traf-1 would have been made, wary of the las it may seem, this was the bill I state of Washington is not wise to fie is probable. I dulcet voiced stranger with glittering! selected for a number of matinee I gl'e up his seat in the house to seek ..Tillamook sat down by . the sea schemes of. "easy 'money J parties. Young girls of 18 or 20 j a seat in the senate, which is prob fit candidate for the senate. Wash ington now has . one senator ' who lives east of the mountains, and the west side of the, state, with two thirds of Its votes, Is entitled to the other senator. . Polndexter has made an excellent record in the house and could easily be reelected to that ody, and he would better stay there rather than make a vain attempt to get into the senate. .. s .1 oa'nEAirj," 7 Wonwn' In ' rrovcrbe.1 . . IIEODORK STEWAKT, brilliant French writer, says rn "How to Oet - Aoqualntad - Wltb God." "X v never climbed to any philosophic height but that I found on reach ing the summit a woman there before nve who had reached at a bound .through and. begged for a quarter of a cen-l tury for. a railroad, the building of which would have been Justified 1 many years ago; now it will get two about the same' time, and a 'little later probably : another, tunning 1 along the coast j, - The same thing -will happen at1 Coos Bay. Not only -will both the I big roada probably build to that im portant point, but another road from, Eugene via Sluslaw is likely. Other coast points will also be. reached by PULLMAN EXTORTIONS I or younger eat in the audience and 1 ably unattainable. Even if he should saw and heard,. things that young obtain a plurality in. the primaries, girls are not expected to know exist j U Is extremely unlikely that a leg- F THE INTERSTATE commerce and lhe parties had been planned or Mature would be elected that would commission succeeds la its effort sanctioned by their own mothers,' no elect him senator, as no "Statement to reduce the fee for Pullman ac- doubt. , It l8 a8tonishing," said a No. l" ia in force in Washington. . coiuramiauons. .ine puuuc man' who sat in the theatre during Besides,' he is geographically a, mis- iiuiu 11 vmyautv the presentation of "Ma Gosse," "to wrong. The extortions the Pullman fiee the8e ett owr ra JooU corpor-atlon has practiced for many at au exhibition that afewyears yeara is, in the light of the facts, ag0 WOuld not have been tolerated in an wndlUon. - From 189f s decent-theatre. We abuse the v v 7 j T M foreigners because of some or their Copyright, mo,' by Edwin WHdmaa. show, the dividends of the company CUBtorns, but they could teach us a I "A bird in . the hand." says champ The event aonarently passed off 1 her divino gift of intuition wiiat I must rather quietly at Vienna, considering 'n through tiresome labor and effort.', the narsonalitv of th vlHitor hut . ratner different Idea might be ine personality or tne visitor, oui gained of woman from a number rof Emperor Francea Joseph ia a very proverbs which aDDeared in the Paris Old man and Roosevelt considerately Gaulols. Uncomplimentary things art let him. off easy. But he may make 'd 'bJut,,lbrk 'n 11 languages 'and nn tnn rhi ini.n. . nwiin iTm ven tht aIlttt French are most brutal nn nf wnman In Ar aHbi peror William considers 'himself a I Among the Spanish maxims oh of rather strenuous character and ac-I the gentlest Is "Women arjd mulea obey' t knowledges no earthly superior, 1: "f'f lwl,.!Vcare"8e(,,tlan "m"-" . The colonel nailed another "base! Man is 'tow: woman 1. fir. Bni h lie" yesterday. But as the Infamous I devil blows the bellows. '- wretch -who reported that the col-r-fhe. tear of women are worth much. ' onel had-lntimated that he mlgM ' ffC h. run for president again was a French newspaper man, no American need cower. But let - everybody be careful what remarks; be makes about the colonel. A very modest young man is the' ed itor of a woman's publication in- Bt. Louis, who say of .himself : "IkswIs la not a man of largo type and. mould, you want revenge on a woman gtve her who loves knows far more than he. The proverbs of the Arabs place a very low value on , women, . Here - are SOitis samples; ' ' ,v . ' , The beauty of , man Is in his spirit: the spirit of woman Is in her beauty. Always consult your wife, but -do 1 as you please. When you want to get square with a man, give him a handsome wife; when physically speaking, weighing more con- sldcrable than 200 pounds less than the president of the united States. But he I Is a bundle of tireless activity, and a a. handsome husband. The Hindus are not. milch mors' re spectful than the Arabs, They say: The coquette is like your shadow; oses, of the Days News ; By Herbert Corey, ,1 whVi $60,000,000 every year. "t deal ahoutltha oroner' rresnect ric- "' the nobest work of God." Ha ta..behuliubutbyjlnes.jarp83 the! Kftt-;.. ... oeai..aDout-xn:proper. respect . ,f--wfth tMr. t-M- PW--tnn: .'.a .a . x. .a . ..... I iw ptWllUli au WW W UVbUCI f AM K A fa a .i 1 J M M A 1 1 aa ,.nlr I ----- , ' cobsc range Deiween tnem ana wii-Ja. . : a : : ui , mo jvuuj, noimj ; vwwa nAOOt Ai fVaTk Vtnrr.r9 thnm 11T1 I I ' i. ' , ... , fir' , aj Villi n if. riMm T , H . .WffHK I j - - . . . K , .. -.... ,-uBW u inveBtmPnt. xppd that of an othpr iZ" .. 1. 7ZT .....ZZT' . " ZZ IOP 01 ne nemocrauo oiros lamette valley points. And the WJ1- lr ""."I Za ai-'' A, r j, PB society pages or me nave got out or tola, hand in this ses- lamette valley will be gridlroned CLP standard Oil and Sunday papers do not record on or " of congress, m the two. or three . B - . f - - 1 mnre mnrinnn nnrnna it inn vannn. 1 , .. ... with electric lines . We are seeing the big beginnings of great things in Oregon.', At last the bonds that have so long held It back and kept large portions of It from developing have been burst and in this good year 1910 Oregon "re Joices as a strong young man to run a race." Truly, big things are be ing done in Oregon, and greater, are to follow. , , . '! 1 -j the public has submitted so long and v11ia i,n.IIIM whr th n vni.i.. v uu wuiiiiaiwuii; iu 1117 uwi wuuo 1 gfg entertain MENELIK K' ING MENELIK, who died again lately, or who ia yet alive, king of Abyssinia, King of Kings of Ethiopia, Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah; as he claimed or claims, is quite an ' interesting character, though we of the western world know or care. but-little about him. But he has been a source of much, effort and (trouble to several European governments.' ' ; Jtfenelik believed ".that he - was a iineai aescenaani or King soiomon and the Queen , of Sheba, and while he may not have had a duly authen ticated genealogical record,- nobody could prove that he was fabricating. He was not purely an African, but manifestly .was a scion of. the Se mitic race. WJien he was" 10. years old his father Menellk I died, and the boy prince .was imprisoned by a usurper of the throne. ' After a while he escaped, and after 20 years fighting regained his threne. Menellk became distinguished be cause, though born rn practical sav agery,' he set Out rather late in life to study and apply civilization. He could have lived in savage splendor and Idleness, an autocrat over mil lions, but he chose to travel and learn and toll in order to try the advantages or civilization for him Ik one of the extraordinary features. It is probably due, to -that '-tendency in the individual to be overawed by the ponderosity of the corporation, and to regard as hopeless any effort to get relief. . The interstate commerce commis sion has ordered the Pullman rate from St. Paul to the Pacific coast re duced from $12 to $10 for lower and to $8.50 for upper berths. It haa or dered the single night rate reduced to $1.30 foe lower and $1.10 for up per berths.- It declares that for the ub6 of upper berths a less rate should Attempts havS been made to cen- Bor the stage, and to attain reform In theatrical method In several In stances. But to censor our audiences : Democratic minority of the house of representatives walk pretty, they have, almost torn out . the walls getting away from his leadership. . After that time he tried to clip- tha wings of Speaker Can' non, to find a doaen or so of. the Demo cratle representatives winding wool- on the shears, he might appreciate afresh as wpII aa our tilavs would hn mnrm another of his favorite stories. It Is- a k vie. vr 1DM tVW ITUlUI VJL Vt31 IBUCC.' KU' credited to Noah during the t food. practical. . The withdrawal of , pa tronage is the only weapon that will connt. ... L "The old man ' had been a-pirootln1 around until everyone was plumb sick of him,", declares Mr. Clark. "But the RUBBER " , -nnuiu uvwm vuv Biicwiu via vnv a-coi A 4U. .1.. TI laia.UJ aha (vdt tka A...-. ONDON has been in the throes generate who had,xHm- high in a tree. oi a runoer craze lately, flue toi "Well, you old nard shell ' hollers the facts that the use of rub- Noah,, "what do you think nowr ber has : lately, become- mueh V?'..9?'. ia iier. piingin- 1 BBnn anuiin v.riaw' aarsi ran . mi w . nw nia nn if be charged than for the lower berths, more varied and extensive, and that :t'h?. fioo. u iwn where I com. oecausw 01 mo greater comiori in me runner is aoia in JKingiana at about I from, they wouldn't think it more n A occupancy of the latter.- As might 10 times its cost in Ceylon,, where itf"J"n shower!'" , , have been expected, the corporation is principally produced. Within two L,,. . Mr" Ti . 'il. Lvm -4-i t-u j -".4.i.. s!.. 1 1. v 1 i Style is being tampered with In this leomi iiw uiuo. uu wij iuo jotih m yum ul ruuocr una ireD- .anecdote. That's the way they talk case to the court of Jast resort. ..The led and its, use has. .been.. Immensely down in'pike county, Missouri, and, as usefulness of the interstate com- increased "W th'e jnanu'facture, "of Mr. Clark wishes to represent that dis- meree commission is' here, exempli- automobiles and motor vehicles.' So trlot ln oth"r songresaes. he talks that tA mt.AA. vi i I i. v I way, tqo., Ana .tnai son, or language , cu ouui yiwi miu,ucu wt ' iut iiu- siooi, uumuoir vi uvuuu f really won Clark hla first real promt portance 'of defending It and of ex-1 down to "clarks" nd ostlers, all who I nente. ? On the Fourth of July, ma, tending Its powers and functions. - - caq diguIPB few'shllllngs to, invest; when riot half a dozen people in Tarn- are bitlna- at -the .haita held out hv many n ew 01 aeaucnamp BEARING FALSE VITNESS numerous -prospectuses and adver- Kr"r ' ""5 T"','!: N IMPORTANT problem cries rhm wrtMaiT anv;mn't many went wild over It. and Mr." Clark. riant.'' Intellectually sneakinar. H la .a ( chase hnr and ah a Y1Ip frnm vnur -flaa man of ideas and a man of hi ah numonn I h- ai,.... in the world." , , r,n vnl, -,an. Mt hrirmr... gold?- Use acid. The strength of an ox?' Beat it. ., The nature of a man? Let him talk. ' The thoughts of a wo man? There s no way, ., Next comes the cynleal Chinaman with a eunning maxlro: , The tongue of a woman Is a dagger, 1 and she never lets it grow rusty. The spirit of a womaa is of quicksilver and heart j.o wax:-'--',;.'"7'""":" The Peralan says: -' When you. go to war say a prayer; when you. go to sea say two prayers; when .you get married, pray, all' tha time. ' '. To question. :"'What . la woman?;' - the Turk answers. "A prisoner;'" the Albanian, ' "a slave;" the Servian "a servant:" ' the Bulgarian, "a compan ion;" the Greek, "a queen." ' ' The gallant French are among the'. most brutal In, their folk sayings about worsen. . "Where there are dogs." they say. "there are fleas;'. where there is bread, there are mice: where there's a ; woman, there's the devil" , Another current aaylng is. ."Women and tools never forgive."' Also:' A woman laughs when she can and Weeps when she wills. . What6tho devil can't do woman o- ' complishes. " . The man who. beats his wife is like a man who beats A bag of flour. All that's good flies away; what' left la not worth having. ' Man can r-ly on the fidelity of his dog to the last breath, of a woman tea the neat temptation. 4 , ' He who believes , his wife, deceives himself. He who doubts her la deceived ' all the same.. Man has, two good , days In 'his life; the one on which he takes and the one " pn which he loaes a woman. Good women are all in the church yard. . ,v " ' ropean customs, government, Utera ture and economics, and made use of the Oregonian that they would dol of them. ... He founded schools, hullt o. They could-literally restore leg- railways, established modern- meth- ihiatlve choice of senator, they could iods of agriculture, and encouraged abolish the railroad commission, they I commerce.; He formed friendships could legalize that which Is now 11-1 with scientists and explorers and dip legal, they could nullify the popular I lomats and became a familiar figure purpose, they could, and there is not ! In Paris, Berlin and London. In the slightest doubt but they would, 1896 he forced Italy to renounce her restore machine' rule to power and J protectorate over his country and In bring the state once jnore info the I fierce . battles drove the ; invaders riot and orgies of boss government, therefrom, proving himself an able It Js along thla trail of design: that I warrior and statesman, i i , . the assembly leads. Its whole con-1 If Menellk died ' lately, he .was tention Is that the people cannot se- about 66 years old and though we lect proper candidates, a contention! know Or care. little about him, he that naturally carries with it the be-j was really a noted, wonderful man, Hef that the people are not capable! and did a work that will live and tr making or. vetoing laws. In this I grow as long as the earth endures, alleged Incompetency of the people .a a - Out' for solution If conditions! ffh d...ih.! ..i. I always alive , to the main chance, stored M are true as described bv Sani- v Pi . w lh . Brazilian rub-nl, canMlt baVwith clippings from the JL Dy.?am ber tree in Its far eastern possessiona fNew York oaoera when he went back uet uuierniyer in an aaaress -v.... 1 z. . , , , on " the administrationf criminal cause(J to be piantefl 20,000,000 rub- "Tw,y wm to me pw ' 0 Justice befbre the1 Acaremy of Social t" , rov!rt . V. ow in nke county." he declared. . and Political Science of PhiladelnMa " T ' . 1 jt he does his. talking In Pike,. he ly," be saidX"lhat the crime of I . , .1 1 floum-FA and th mimtAr nf a. tnrm tt , a NUV DAOlUfi, VUL UUt JftI jyi UUUi L1UU W " I4. Zm - riADl nftr la -nAtn wJf r A laa A ImamsV .!., 1 w smaaJlA hIamII MM a sL.a m aavkBan.a 41m, m.. vxn j 111 j mo uuuiurntru au. at ioaat Lui ee I J .a. m .a. a.tn m Atr I ,iuuuovw ,iiaa,v 1101 iinija 1,110 a uur out of every five cWs tried in the Z "-..A'Z. ver heard at the eapitol when, he n.,w. in j,ti, lca.,o i qunuuiy was gets going right, Mr.. Clark won his COUrtS itt yfcUn an iSSUe Of . fact is marketer! for the rnhhe tree I. n 1rtrhl a th. rn.i,,th n,lnrt Involved. -It has become so general Brow growth, and a maximum crop 'airly. He was the next biggest man iUttl LlaW jJ 111 LB ITKHrU IL B.1II1UHL HH H I I- ' .aV stilt a . . t. ..a, r .a. 1 UI1 IXIO LfQIMWIHUi; IU I If alUUIl ill BrU oar of fe,inevltable accomnanlment t" .!r.r" rU; Williams. When Williams was elected ' ------ ' uer luarw are cvuuuerou a wi ana to the senate. Clark fell heir to his u. J very profitable 'investment, for the troubles. - If report from y Washington self and hia tiPonle H aturllprl F. " , 8Uf',e;l! " 18 mucn tree Is one Of great longevity and is correct, ne w a.reaay urea or anv ronen Pnatoms govern ment l.ters.l TUln " . ' reputa- subject tq no destructive peSV,- I J .. ST Tk. i. '.i. rvJi . LJmr 't ,1;' ' I r (..; I "V t J i ,m. vi I " Ht." 'fir 1 v- . BEAUCHAMP CLARK. '-- i ha became teacher of a school near Law renceville. Ky, where he was born in 1860. The school had SB unmlv achnl. ara who. had been accustomed x drlv- Ncws Forecast of 7 " ' . . Gomin Week lies the sole excuse for an assembly, and lta whole purpose Is a design to prevent the people from having par ticipation in affaire. Tha emergency clause is exactly the device by which an assembly governor and an assem- THE GOLD BRICKED . IFE IS A comedy In the number " and atmnHff rtt VnlllKle mi. pie. Barnum declared that the public Insists on being hum bly legislature could accomplish their! DDd,. and time confirms hit the- purposes and execute their will. Once I ,u- Tne conrideace game ia Its var- In power, they would have a free! led forma Is played, is exploited and hand, the' way : would be open, the I Pd in the newspapers, but the ft ate would be theirs and the neo-1 nnsopnuueatea, one after another. pie would be shorn Umha, stripped I marcb np to the bait and bite.' The r power, robbed of authority, beln-l ,eec,B i xouis uuubert, aged 55 i -kb to resist, -and a pathetic spec-Bna aieiy oi ciiensnarg. reveals bu tacle of lost rights. If the aaamhlv.I man nature ln all Us simplicity. Gull i?es win, nothing can check them In I Dert ' wealthy farmer, who eold his th headlong career of power and I r,DCB Tor i.dow, aurted orr to wed rarpose that will be theirs. In th I woman of his choke and tarried Uernative thus presented thereli aa I ,n Sn Francisco to see the sights. icne of tremendous importance, and! TWO confidence men gathered him to Ing a singularly unruly team. , Ills best firm of lHr TJnterrhver la aim h an rn . , ' . .. " , . . i J . "8n wlu " u oac "P"" J trim uun ui Air. uuieriuyer is sucn as to nA wTitla the nrndiict la ihna he. I .tt,. : . a , i , .... " nw.-wnii-i wuius. -ii ,n rrarlna 1v hut, anrelv lnireerl gulne and glowing In manner, charged la pommon knowledge that In : almost Br,ri the demand In incrennlna- ven I wUh tremendous voice, he is accustomed every trial ohe wltnesB or a group much faster the American rnhher . roar down opposition. On one occa , i. nt,i nt n i,ot mucn raster, me American: ruODer 8ion someone in' Pike county ventured swear to one" state of facts and that trust stretches itself Into mammoth to question a statement he made ln a another gives testimony tO the 'exact nrVirmrtlnnn ahaorha lta tnllUnna with SDeech. " , contrary. That a part-Is false and e-rpot lov and ia Jhankfnl for the "Lock the doorr, bellowed Clark. the other testimony partly or wholly tnnoftnSifeu t1T,"a.ow;l.K,'m'!2aa,,,..tS true la probable. Mr. Unkmyer at- blgg8lnss ofprovldence and coPgreas. e heart of th. msnthat called inuuiea iue cuunmun in pun 10 me i CHINA 0 LOGEK .PROSTRATE neavy , penalties prescribed for per RECENT incident-Bhows that China la gaining courage and elf respect sure slgna of its ."awakening' . that , we haye read so. much . about " A Chinese, prince, about to make a tour of the Apologies followed and the interrupter escaped. . For there Is reason-to believe that Clark might have at least tried to .make good. When he was 1 years old Jury In most of the states. - Twenty years In Crimlnat cases and 10 as a maximum penalty.' In civil , are so heavy; that they tend to discourage prosecutions for the crime. ; Aa a partial remedy, Mr. Unter- niyer insists that In every -trial -It should be made the duty of ther Jury j several governments of the countries! retired from public life 'm 17.' His to ' find whether any witness . has to be visited, and TSngland, the story J last public act was a memorial address been guilty of wilful false swearing,' oes, sent a message to Peking that! to congress, signed by nim aa president Washington, April 18.-Interest- In po litical circles will center la the special Ing teachers away. Clark broua-ht en .i 1 . .... -u l . . ' " - - ' i siAvieaa uitium vi iicvr x visa, vuuuca , ron poker to schoot with him and laW a successor to the lata Renresentatlva it across hla desk. Sometimes he laid "accessor . to im lata Representative It across his pupils. But he did not JPrK",- 11 wu the third election or really, have any trouble, although on member of congress eincejbe pas one occasion ' a- peevish . scholar shot , "e of the Payne-Aldrlch ' tariff . law, through a door at him with a rifle. In February the Democrats hada lara-en Clark belted on tha two Mix shooters that majority than -usual In electing a eandU d!. inJiU ." Wal1 bh,nd th dle succeed the' late D. A. De Ar KaeWeTthS: mlire8.e M'ssourl. - and last month for xJv:htyet:t iun'puy. fr iD,r ,eyf,ior? tctto? which nsuallv fniinw th Demoerata will naturally feel much rneUro"ghyef.T.oP "! 0V l th Hla aim ha. always been better than the i t in" , !.. . ,B,r 6ther fellow'a , ' . ; " campaign on the seme leading Issue as Whil n.rf, , . . : wHuram oui in ine irouneenin Mas wnatever Clark may reel, rin'a : nm. I u. ... ji..i .Mli, )( . u, .' ,.' ; - . , wvimwin Hioiiivv- imuicij-,, .Aim limn n aTrl Tn life an 1.7L. . P " f ,lv,n due t0 thl P"T-AWrU-ll - early in life, and his face Is rockboundJ tariff measure. Oeorae W. Aldrlde And James 8. Havens ara the opposing and Impenetrable when he strikes a rug- ua i proposition. h is particularly fond. too. of . talkinr In niNki.. inlttlng the listener to furnish the moral io uu nimseu. so Uncle Joe's gwlne to discipline me, Is he?" he akd the ouieroiy, -MlKfl me think of a sol dler I saw endurln' the war. The sol oier naa an , oj'. pepperbox pistol with " oHrreis. Air tie got mad at an other soldier and shot at him. He hevah did -hit the man ha shot at, but he wounded, nine other soldiers In tha leg." April 17 in HistoifyBenjVmmTA .After a continuous public service of t. hi iv,, auuuuuvcu m mvi tu (.ucirnore than 49 years, benjamin vranaiin and to name the person or persons so Involved, and that when-there ia no Jpry lit the case, such duty shall devolve upon the court. . If in a. trial any witness be , so named, it shall be the duty of the proper officer to bring a prosecution for perjury. A DECADEXT PCBLIC TASTE 1 one well worth an hour of ny citl i. a a solxr Sabbath reflection. int. i ii iNt;s ron oittcox their bosoms, explained to him how he could win "easy money", by bet ting on the horse races, told him they aad tapped the telegraph wires and were able to kaow results of 11C EYL'S of the country are on the races la advance, and the raacber uriroB, oa account of the rail- Invested. road luiildicg iM-Ing done la thiaj He sever stopped to think that if this je-ar. Hondreds of j his companions had so good a thing . -i i ue mini ana ounaredi they. would never be sharing it with re text jesr. Trns of millions of a total stranger. He had either merer a are l-rir. t ana Will be :.fpt!ri4 nr 614 nnt rer?1 ,. - v. Perhaps in r o state j get-rir h-ukk ex. hemes thst the s lis work. - "" mum i.,roaa . ssry are always gold brkked and ,!.'t eTer:, ione In the time j that every week er two the news ti r f tfrr.e The ti of thfi J r apers carry arrousts of thors lambs t.f,e ccjL'.ry set uy, from tht coantrr. als ays the li ell UCH IS SAID and written about' the decadent dramatic fare provided t for . theatre goers, but little Is said about the undermining forces that brought about this unseasonable condition. It Is certain that the managers .pro vide what the. public, is willing to pay for, and if froth, and very often. filth, Js the portion of the playgoer, tne puDnc tame is to be blamed, . On the other. hand,, what is re sponsible for this decayed public taste? The American magazine an swers that It Tomes In' large part from the vaudeville theatres with their decoy "cheap and wholesome entertainment ' for the people." It tays that seldom caa one invade a vaudeville theatre without being con fronted with at least one feature of aa unsavory aatnre. a fee tire that. win crimson toe cheek of your wife or daughter. If not an unxavory ex hibltloa. there are nrfeMe sours, dances or lesd Jets. if aft this, thea lle tcue and lie sacredae he would not be received at the ennrt lot the Abolition society. On the evening of St James unless certain .conces- or Saturday, Apru it. ito. ne oiea in slons that England had demanded of f!" il0"' !B Jdlngjiouth from Chinawere granted. - Not so far back ,h n k ' 1" r,ie mnM v, , -I . . . I Tourth, WhlUdelphia. The building was China would have at once and meek- ltorn dowll n)a.n7 . years ago and the iy yiemea, sua jseggea ma roaring I court cut through to Chestnut street and British lion s pardon for having de-1 called Franklin Place. layed to , grant whatever waa re- J!? JlZ .,lon ?",2e?5' v... v v a 'A the dlplomatlo agent of the ""M' v-euBitju, iuu revolted colonies he had been kept too St. James was curtly informed that busy to give much attention te matters Great Britain would be' cut out Of at home, but Immediately after his re the.r.rince'a'ltinerarv . . ' turn to Philadelphia he waa elected chief ' , . ' - - JexecutiTS of the state. It was with s This Incident seems to Indicate a-ua .nd srsurui heart that he settled that China is (beginning to consider I down te the enjoyment of that repose itself as good as other nations. In- which he haa coveted so long, is s let .i,tu. v. th.t . Iter ts friend he wrote: k m. a r , 7 , .v . .1 "1 am now In the bosom of my fam- u"" tiuuuci cu iuo men anti uy and rind rour new little prattlers patient -flowery empire for genera- who cling about the kheea of their srand- tions. China la indeed aa empire of ntl afford m great pleasure. I inimtt.Me. .hi,i. t.-i surrounded by my friends and have ..... r..,B a ,ffectlol).te, Kood daughter and ana once inuy omes swsgenea, in-law to take care f me. I hare got enlightened, progressive, there Is no Mate my niche. very good bouse which reason- whr. with It. (00.000.000 I built t rears ago. and out of which L nave orsn eititv in luraiaT1! employments. 1 Franklin, howevrr. "as sever satis fied enless be was at work. He titUtted hla Maura by employing bis tongue and pen-ta behalf of various pro 2 acta for the public good; .and. .reverting to the ocrapatlos et nis younger says, had people, it should not become A world power of the first or at least of the second magnitude and Importance . Bryan wrote a letter to be read at the Jefferson day celebration ln Indianapolis, ia which he said that small printing prs t or. in Ms room, a recent speech by President Taft lth wht-i he amuaed himeeif. Here. admitted. the cuantUative theory of at '"i f '" he ..a . ' . eTrtred. For my rrsonal ease." he tnoney. and some newspapers disis- had written to Waahingtos Is the pr- genuoutly represented that this let vioua year. ! sh-wid hare died tr ter indicated that Bryan was still ar vesrs are, but though thee two years gulag for 4reeasd unlimited eolnags h"r ,b7J T"1 !" '"-"-H.ting r-m. i . , . . . . am glad te hare lived ihem. atnr- I raO CfUl'f. -o such conausio. U de- i vpo W prr.tat .itB.doa.- dn Wednesday,. April 21, the resialna Bhno'Phr. were Interred Jri Christ church burying ground, at the c"",rr nun ana Arch Streets. Phila uv.tiuw. Mm. iunerai procession at tracted an Immense concourse of speo w..,r.u,u. io nave numbered mors than 20,000,- and during lu progress through tha streets bells were tolled and' minute guns rtred. It wss beaded byj the clergy of the citv Anil frtrr mA ! uunnra neoutiy council, the gen eral assembly of the state. - the i se . . muviwmm court, memoers of the bar, 'the corporation of the .it h- " city mm their Journey men and apprentices, and representatives . preciioany au or tne various eduea tlonal societies. - . . Franklin's body waa dennett K.i. that ' of bis wife. Deborah, hm, th. nuiiurin wan or tne survlna' a-ranm , ieia bibd witn tne simple Inscription, Benjamin ano Deborah Franklin, lTie," was placed to mark his grave.- In early life FrahklUi had written a fawlful epitaph for himself, whirh published la the New England Coorant and has become famous: Tbe body bt Benjamin FrackUn. printer. Ilka the cover Of an old book, its contents tern ut. asd stripped ef-lts lettertog and gliding, lies here, food for worms. But tne wora snail sot t lost: for It wllL aa he believed, appear once more la a sew and more elecant edition. rna, and corrected by the author." Today,-In Ills, Old Glory f!rt floated over the rapltol at Washtntton. It la the birthday, .of Samuel Chaae, knows as -The Torch That LltMed fp tKa Revoltitlonary Flame In . Marvlanir litll; Jlahlon Dtrkeraon, (wnurr nt tha nary under Jar k eon 17Ti! jtrrM. bald Alexander. Bated tu-elor i;;i; Vllllam fillmore Ftmm. envf lat and poet lf); iRie! Aoatte AlllHnne, mer1-8 blMlnrrarher ll!); J. Fler- jni Hnrinn. tha firanrter tMJTl and tMSl'arn R. Vv. e- rnr)' cf state tinker j cKlnl'-y (1ti?j. - j candidates bn the Republican and Demo-1 cratio tickets. ; President Taft Will deirvey an address of Welcome at the -opening of the na tional congress of tha Daughtera'of the American Revolution, which will begin, its Sessions In Washington Monday morning In Continental Memorial hall. Addresses will also be made by Thdmas . Nelson Page and John Barrett, chief of the , International Bureau of American Republics.:' The session will last a week, f The most notable wedding of the sea son Is, to take place in New York Tues day, when Miss Marjorle Gould, .daugh , ter of Mr: and Mrs. George J. Gould, will become the bride ' of Anthony J. - Drexet Jr. of Philadelphia. , -Ths cere mony will take, place at St Bartholo mew's Protestant Episcopal church and will be followed by s large reception at the Gould- residence ln Fifth avenue., ' . ; A New York event ef quite ' differ ent character, but one which is cartels . te attract an equal amount' of publio at tention, will be the trial of Albert W. Wolter the alleged youthful degener ate, who Is charged with the murder of Ruth Wheeler, - the pretty IS-yar-old stenographer, whose dismembered . and burned body wss found recently in Wo!-, ter' s apartments, whither the young girl had gone ia search of emptoymeaV-f f Concluding his visit In Vienna, former President Roosevelt- will Journey 'to Budapest, where he - Is due te srrive ' Monday, . After a stay of two days la ' the Hungarian capital he wilt take the ' Oriental express for Paris. Aa etitlrs week is to be spent la the French me- tro polls. In addition - te the official functions sfready announced, visits t the Pantheon and, other great French monuments are planned, and there will -be also, it is expected, automobile (rips to many Interesting points .- Other events of the Week In the for elgn fleJd will be the opening of the Co- vent Garden season ef grand opera ti London.' the beginning of s notable Shakeapesra feat Hal at Strat'ors-on- Avon and the formal opening of the Universal and International eapoaltion In Braasels. The Brussels evposttlon. Which ts to continue through U.m estlrf summer, will be general In scope, snd ' one of the features wilt be aa interna ' ' tlonal art salon. - fr. Haldase, Bavrbelor. , j From the Fprlntneld Republican. A lxnden LlHeral vtin mestleve a hlpa-rerhene- ef Mr. Ha Mane. In this "W-ra-hette the smsatr-g Seatec oc'jra: "He la aa authority r errVv. slvee, Kut he 1-as sever been n arr1 " Was It a willful j-ae? It ca'3s t- rn'r-t Arterrna Ward's rtwft: I mm ht4-fc-a J-i, otit ) wife la a rrhj terua. V