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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1910)
0 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 23, 1010, "i"1 31 THE JOURNAL rv- INPKrCNDENT NKWBPAPKR. '' ..' . .fnbpDer form. If there has, been reform in the ease of thta prisoner, the cuds of the law hare been attained and he should not" go back to the Walla Walla penitentiary to serve the re mainder, of his sentence. '.Jia inve. tint ity ntg (tixept Soot) an4 , una .iid Yh;ii tttt. furiuod. w. 1 tigation .would determine .the facts. i ana . t.mi th niwtsrriM Portland., or., (ar .-! .(.lou UirougD the , OMii aacoudclaas ; I M'HONKS Mala 'DTS; Hnm. A-eifcl. !l di-priiin.nta tacb by ihm 1.1) lii cp.r.tc waat department r wast mihiicm APVERTISINO KKPRICSENTATIVbV I ik!h A K.nlnnF On.. Burnawlrk HUliainf, . lift. arraua. Near Vera; ou7-W luifMni-. Cntaaaw. ; i- ' - tuiiwrlptloai Terms by tnalf or to Soy tddrtss (o Uj Lulled Niat.. Canada r ,aiaiw ; 4 DAILY, tl' ' C; ;rr. ...... IS.no I Oh Booth On year ........ S& BO I On swats...... .S J . DAILY, AND SDNDAT. . ; On. year... .IT .60 I OH, Santa. ......i .St ft la a hts-h. solemn. almOst awul thought for every Individ-';' uaJ man that hie earthly Influ- 7 ' ence. which "has had; com-', mencement, will never, through all the ages, were he the very meanest of us, have an end. Carlyle. the-, case ,.ls sufficiently' ap pealing to warrant the t(me .nJ pains incident' to such, an investiga tion. .'. ' . :v'.'.A;;.., .:.,..vr.,.:i ,y:.'k ,7 - In the life of nearly every-maa there are regrets.. The great school of experience swiftly shows every criminal hew his life is futility and t5- "tiie sxrriDTrr op foliti- ITTP! Vow York Tlmnlnf Post dia- I cuBBes shrewdly and instruc- .1 lively. "The Stupidity, .of Pollti clans." The All da-Conger brib ery case -was the occasion Of the com -nent and the Post says that although "the machine has been kicked, cuffed and battered. It can learn nothing: cannot improve itself;' Is fclind'to public opinion." :, The Allds-Conger-matter is only one incident. ."Throughout Governor Hughes' Incumbency," the Post says, "the machine has, invariably, placed Itself in the wrong position." JEtoiited again and again, they are now a de spairing body. They are regularly overthrown by the men and the ideas that they pretend to despise. 'Their very concentration upon their "petty ppolls, their beggarly graft, and their office-broking blinds them to ; the broader aspects of a situation, and their ; opaqueness to moral; ideas is ever worth an arpayAcorps o their opponents. This they never, learnj nor can they understand why the re former is never beaten and why it is that sonJe of their own, greatest victories are, In reality, crushing de feats.".; v: - v't 7-77 :. -a-'- 7'; ; There is a good deal more of this 'exposure of "the stupidity of politi cians, not: only in. Albany, but in :' Washington, fV&f'&ad- in other cap itals and centers, ; Wi have seen much of this stupldit : of ' politicians In Oregon machine politicians fighting against the people, kicking aganst the pricks no need to mention names and circumstances, 'The trail of the political : machine is strewn thickly with bleaching (boneB; it is becoming, a. Veritable golgptba- all "because of :"the stupidity of politi cians"; because-they can learn noth ing. Charles I, 'Louis. XVI', and George 7 III could learn nothing; neither : can your modern American machinet politician. To the "political scaffold'or guillotine with him J" I ? ' , '7 - '-7 7 .. i-jV' there are undoubtedly some.; that profit from the lesson; , If his expo-1 the 'sweetness of that soul is wlr? rlenee in crime taught Orr th aim- tored in the anonymous lines he pie but manifest truth that an hon-J placed as an t epitanh-at-hi8 ; wffe's est life pays "best,, and if. he has 6e-j graver ' i';;.:-', 7--. -:,. ::rv run to trPdd th noth rt vtrtna. It 1 Warm summer sun. shlna kindly here: wbuld.be' 'almost inhuman to. send r1?,d"',f '?r VlWJlZV him back ,td aj prjsqn.v Governoj Ilayj; j Good night, dear 'heart, rood nlht, food wnovis-a man. of ' many good' parts, i " : . mgnvs. ; ..t.k. , t our own community there are Ijlgh-jout AMrkh's ability wilrh may be Drowea men or gooa repute ana rec-ian advnntage. nut in muny other ognized social ! position . who,- every I states the senators who have fol time they put up a stova pipe are as J lowed ' Aldrich will have to stand aeepiy guuty, in secret as ever Twain aside, . . . , ... , , was,; Perlgh the thought, and for the " '. l-.-l ; sake of .our good towniwoman whom ' '''That the whole state should be Twain so; horrified, let the awful fallerf upon to vote, pn proposed coun truth never be made known.' . ty, divisions ia probably a; bad pol ' But in passing it ought to be said 4cy County division isa local rather that there was a Virtue or two in than a statewide question. But since Mark Twain as well as in. his critics, all the people of the state are to be He helped the world to be joyous and I called upon to decide several of these t,he same Book that forbids swearing I cases., the voting on tljem should be says mere is joy jn heaven.. ' lie had careiui ana mougutrui, not recmess a soul that drew millions to him, 'and t COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF TANGLEFOOT By MHm OverUt THE CXIMBERS. will doubtless take jcogaizance of the rase." . r .' ,. : ' v. - Try this on .your piano. ABOUT REPUBLICANISM PROTECT THE rUBLIC HEALTH I I HE VEEY. regular Seattle P..'. I. alludes t the course of the ln- 8 -IT-NOT-worth the- while of the ' American people tO' have (a di recting head and' a- unified as- This is the mountain all overed; with snow : surgent or progressive Republi- To.. th of which many men swors is a thev would' arn To ' show to the world that Cook m frost By searching- for records he never had -OBI., .. These are the men-e.ll ready and primed Tp weery. the grods, that ih,mounta.)n tM FROM Mlc33 0Uft( 5 cans as 'mercerized Republi qanlsm.' How or, wherein the term sault all along the line on dis- applies is not xplained.: ' A mercer ease? - Ve' have a bupeau of animal 18 enned as one who deals in Bilks Industry at. JVashingtonV that ' leads nd woolens,, and it would seem that the attack on diseases in cattle," hogs, t 1" the standpatters who have been horses and other animals. 'W'e have engaged in mercery; ;with an, en- a bureau for 'directing .the' assault larged definition u on - nrtnitf.rntri fnnda i w f hnvA i a rui. ine rt l.' comDiams: i nese bureau for the nrotection of forests, tnen .were elected as Republicans. w.VZ'ST1 s. - .mineral lanua, ana joiner .resources, i vims iu ma mx,iyiv euura 01 wmcn ne Kepi, in a dook. wuc uiueui juuno ; oner iuo r . health of 'the hog, but neglects the these principles and policies were ap child. sjiend great sums of money proved not only by the-separate, con in distribution, of seeds for flowers stituencies of Insurgent Republicans, and vegetables but do not expend a tut by the American people also,' and penny on the general issue of safety whether Mr, Cannpn's mistakes have of the nnhilc from the inroads of been few or,many, whether they have disease,; , A directing department' of been' little or large, they will, not a MCudowhS orexnizerf nint nfttntfn hv, shield these recreafte reDresefitalves H w thhlor eould dft,t' wh0 cou,dn 1 the-federal goTeniment .:ould- jind' a'8alMt vtM;lth;-, -tpoiitiet ,vn th archr who looked for,' would evolve sanitary and other reg- meyvnave repeaieaiy outragea." were really and truly not right In the ulations. would organize the country ' ; The editor of the P. L is a candi- f??' v. -iv- ' into n armed camp for.sault.on date ,for United States senator. He W f akefBlt,ta"dub..' C"mbr" the most destructive enemy of man.' learn somelhifag about the sew- Who had for the timbers, a choice. line The 'possibilities "of a scientific bu- -tlmenta f thBpeople next.taU;that xvhk .MJJb?'-.L.V-'i-s.I nun It, )i. .,tJt.M. la In I nvlll rhflii fin bls vl ftw ' vMnnrl n Iflnlrv ' in the results achieved by the United has already . accumulated to show ea Ji Lu.f ' " Doctor States war department-ln the reduc- mai.a large majorjiiy ot people are , . . - . , tion ot yellow fever, in Havana. The In sympathy with the "mercerized" Now h? Is problem -of interest to death rate there from! the disease in Republicans. i ..Mr No matter who climbs to the summit so 1880 wks 824 per' 100,000. In 1896 But what', specifically, is the mat- ' nblln , ' was 639 and in: 1897 was 428. Af- fer" with these men's Republicanism? 01 lh stm r??Jn que8t,on' th fact ter the American occupation sanitary Haven't they, as good a right as oth- rfe'11.h. hut, faker for.all of bis pains. apd other scientific rgeulatlons were ers to 4efine ;and interpret Republi- pbtb PUNNEft's TEntRiBLB' time. applied and the death rate fell to 124 canismf What-"policies 'and prihci- Pet Punner heard a funny noise while per 100.000 of population in 1900.' 'plea" .hare they, renounced The' Next al? he hlard'anotw SSfse'nt ws. to G In 1901 and in r.ern ln inn!?, platform declared for tariff revision 1 1 ? a Pugret Bound. I9n3 anil 1904 , .ana tne oeoDie naa & runt to assume " - - . . .. i .. iPT-.j' y It ,-i - " - , I n ' . J ABl llllllt. l.flMT'H ' ' .j i . "'',.'. n, The - well " being' of men" 1s all that this meant big tariff reductions Pbo!etri, she never has a show who'i grounded in the nuestloh "ofMiow even though' 'the1 platform' canning-! wrfiiS'L- . '1' There- is- no- happiness if -there is no insurgents are putting . the people's WhrllJ?v"'tt ripJ"nKti? r"' UHe health. The cost that " falls upon interpretation n the platform. How pTf you Woodland at Orchards, why you m . ji...- - ... . I will t,lm n1- .v l ' cmiH rlli. T-nlt" ' , SMALL CHAXGK Mnrlc Twain add-d to the world nappinerts, , ' , , v . .Tpr1"? re only a few days more In wmco to ne coujited. , ' Borne of these mornings ought to be However the tariff ml.ht M i ... . " ' .wvu. lew (BOiie wouia lie satisfied. The '"white wlnRs" are an Improve The roses, Jn favored spots, will soon ne out, win prouaoiy be some for May A D. A. R.' convention Is like a Dam orratlc convention In one respect; there ia amuyu a, row. ' ;.'.-. , . At last Colonel Roosevelt Is In K farae. where lie ought to be able to nave tne most corking time of his life. ,Ubo1 Joe has ' some' trouble but he is iiickv in Dulnar SDeAker Insteerl o presicling' officer of a l. A. R. conven i Honesty" Is; the best policy, remarks j.ne epoKane apoKeBman-iteview. ui mat .paper was not the jrlglnal dlscov erer of that truth. , Mr. Hearst hs expressed his opinion' Of Colonel Roosevelt - The colonel's opinion or Mr. Hearst would be Interest lag, lr expressed .1 - ,. ' Prlcea are trolnir down, .the market reports sa v. but . house wives have not ooserveq any very great, reduction in tne cost of Jiving yet.,.-, y , ; . . I'ersona too obstinate and silly to'-an Mwert in miAittinnH or at Mnuak aminiAr.1 ator arei prone cly sent to jail. Little time (mould ' be wasted , areulne with The state of Washington ' has . lost millions of dollars through timber land frauds, and tne btsr" thieves are cealously opposed ' to conservation of timber resources, 7,,.- .7 A Portland woman savs -Mark Twain was "nobody" socially, when he wrote innocents Aoroaa. ' Jaut ne Decame more of somebody In the- world than all tne rest, or tne party, an the same. . A woman married for 81 years,, and who Is the mother of 1$ children." has sued for divorce on the ground of ln oompatability of -temper. It - took a great deal of experience - for ,. her to find jt out. -. c- , . lodge Goodwin of Salt Xake- says Mark Twain, whom he knew.Jn Nevada some 60 years- agd, was in his SOth year instead of his -76th year. Pos sibly among his many Jokes the humor ist did .reduce his .age, by. five years. 7 Fadi and Fashions. ) rsV YOiUv, April 23-rThere Is 'na linger any O.mbt that the limp dlrectolre draperies have been completely driven from the field - ty the overklrts,' funics, double skirts and flounce. - The. new double Skirt effects are undnnlitixllv vnnthf.il and chsrmlng, and far more becoming OnEGON SIDLXIGHTS It's a hard job to rent a house In La Grande. . ' ' . 7' , v Cannery company has been organlied at Creuswell. Umatilla county expects a bumper wheat yield. ' ' , , " Coos I?sy motor boat club has nearly 100 members. j l-l.t.k.nL will al.o h.v a rose fes- l? rnajorlty of women than the tlvsl In June. . . , ... I''if'ng oraperies of the winter season. ' ' j 7 '""n'n pattern books abound with Several deep bedrock Wells are being models of apron overnklrt or tunlrs sunk In Cottage Grove. ; In pointed or rounded effects and the style Is so enoy to mnke un satisfao pretty e a m n n v An order for cement for paving In me spion tunlo character, this Medford amounts to 864 carloads. summer. r ; , . There are also two other variolic , Amany nas a prooigy in a -year-oia me oouoie SKirt, the Russian blouse or girl who Is an expert plan player. - smock and the long crusader tunic " t:, ,-:' i'V.' .wh,ch f" Im8t to the ankles. The A 40 sore county, so(d ' . style is so env to mnke un an Forr'oo611-Hood R ver tori,y nd ''f t "uh Ior , ty " .7' : : : '' trlmmlnar effects that we shall se More bulldlna-. will be done in Halnea 1... ...... ' "? fhi II an In n nr.vlriul Vur . . M1"" "i)"' nernier CM . ' 0 1 ' It is- predicted that' the next election win create tnree new uregon counties. Mebbo. . ' - - . In Pnrla I Just now. and most of the lately im ported gowns show this long 1 tunlo rather than the abbreviated abron at via of drapery. "7.'. ftewbera was. alwavs a temperance town, but it now ooasia a .new water wagon. The crusader 1 tunlo la fastened 'dl. rectly down the front, or a little to one side of the front and has' the effect of men from disease is a colossal item will this Invite the peoples-roth.?-. ''ttwMut of expenditure, and It la a cost con-N "Th progressives are also In tavoxj uflevoit7" ien- 0,t sequentT direc Violatldn of fixed A MERE SAMPLE lESTIMONY in the federal court Ih Portland' Thursday ' was a beautiful taje of how Oregon forests 1 were Guggenheimed. .Frederick A. Kribs - furnished the money and McKlnley, Puter and "Tarpley went out and worked in the vineyard. In this particular Instance, jas recounted by Tarpley under bath,' 17 persons . were rounded up and taken to Roseburg.to1 file on; timber telaims. : All, of course, were bogus lentrymen; used merely to fulflir the .terms of the law.Tonvenlent.for Ma JKlnley and . associates to turn an r'honest v penny and needed,, by moneyed monopolists for grabbing .Oregon forests. tThe expedition was financed by the higher-ups. The .railroad fare, the hotel bills and all 'other expenses 6f iheTbogus'but ac 'commodating entrymea were paid by 'the - steering committee, .For . their fpains, the dummies received. Tarp 2ey says In court, $75 to$100 each, In consideration of which the timber. ; grabbers got lands worth now any jwhere from $10,000 to $20,000 per quarter. . Evidence of their real rvalue Is seen In the refusal of an Al- i sbany man last week to, accept $60,- 1000 for four quarters In the Sllet district, and in the payment by one 'man of $8000 in cash. for a mere re linquibment' of a; quarter in the .same district. - . The - financiers got their timber, the steering committee a juicy loot, the bogus entrymen $75 tot $100 apiece and. their expenses on the excursion to Roaeburr. and the people of Oregon lost a big slice out of the rich legacy of forests, a bountiful nature provided tor them. L To tire vent stasia lllta this la tha purpose of conservation. , By steals like this, great portions of the forest lands of Oregon have been Guggen heimed and Weyerhaeusered. Such is high privilege, and such the sys tem for which those who oppose con fervatlon are clamoring. itly; or indirectly upon Jn the main,-of the "Roosevelt poll- 8ay vf81 ,can' bronohoa; : but xed laws of health. To cies" Aren't these good RepublK W Vr ThTmouYi. Ln.I.J . -J Ji a A j.. tftan a14Ma9 ;., Tf a Vt a tiaAnfa I 1 ' tha iuiu " T T aiding men and women In their re- "eve In-making them so. ; .ue "S.fi "SF sistance to disease Is the object of Except" as to these matters, ."Re- ln't talk 'to. me, I hate you,". them Senator Owens' bill for a department publican principles and policies" Is a .-.T8 LhS11- LtVL, "of public "health, and, in Borne proper .mere claptrap "phrase, sounding so- Goidendaie" form, it ought to pass congress, .and norousiy , but . meaning nothing or maideA'turned qte paii ? the , proposed department' become a anything. Protection aside, what. Is Pete. heard a trigger clicking; be fled part of the plan of the federal gov- ZXlf:lth 'T eTA're. the,'k.w ernment.' It we use the federal an- aiifereniiaties a (Republican from a thority for colleges ' and commerce. Pemdcratf , And the insurgents ace for lands and labor., for coal and cat- "ill protectionists, s And what Is tle. for horses and hogs, why not -Republican or a. Democrat, anyway? also use It for human life? - -' Most people have quit worshipping a party name. . Tbejrwant better fe- ORCII.UID VALVES - "ults of government, for themselves, the masseB ; And they see some hope N -THE extraordinary prices paid, of this 'in. Republican; , Insurgency, ' sales of orchard lands In thelyi-j Not1 an eminent standpatter cduld cinity of Medford are almost be-1 carry more than half a dozen states wildering. - The figures are so If. running for president nor many large as to almost if not fully equal congressional districts. Only insur- prlces for the famous orange landaJ gency. and more of It, can save the of, southern California, ' Two thou Republican party. sand dollars an acre Is a good price no. What. to KlicKlut there for orange groves In full bear ing 'of pefpuar varieties. : The Med ford district has beaten" that price this week in the $2375 per acre paid by CV A. Burkhart ,'of Philadelphia for a It acre pear orchard. The land A DE3IOORATIO PRATER THE CASE OP ORR rTMPATHT goes out to the es-' x rsfi convict Orr. If. as some brlleve, he was llTing a re fer i life. On the surface, his rar la Tortland was respectable. -i. la rplte of surm!es to the con ' i'T. rray have tee a an honest ef- ' -: ti 1!t SB nrHrht Hf. Tha rw-v- r, with f t;ch uBCPrtalcty u Is la t, prer:f, U aieqaate ' t x 9 jr,t'-t!g3tion of the HE Hon. Richard Croker predicts that the next "house of rep resentatives and the next pres ident will be Democratic." But is a part of the famous. Burrell or-Richard has not taken fully into ac chard and for the past nine years count the .enormous capacity of, the has yielded an average return of (party for making political blunders, $500 per acre. ' I Its Infallible penchant for doing the - The price is Justified by v the wrong thing at the right time has achievements of the orchard, as a I long made it the Republican party's revenue producer. It Is the record I own best friend. The one hope that price for orchard land In 4h north- the Republicans now have of gain west, exceeding . the recent Hood I lng the next house is that the Demo- Kiver recora or $2000 per acre.' icrats win nounaer into political sui- In the Medford district more than clde. Nothing put the cohesion that $500,000 has been paid for orchard comes from -the. everlasting truths ianas auring tne past tew aays, tne j taugnt Dy jenerson ; naa saved the figures ranging. from $1T)00 per acre Democratic party from . destruction upward. Many of the purchases are long ago. Other parties' have come by wealthy easterners, who are fast land gone, but this cohesion has saved becoming orchard magnates-in the (the Democratic party from Jeffer- southern Oregon district. ; - son s time to the present. It has" It was but .yesterday that the lands been battered," beaten, slaughtered in question went at $40 or $50. per And sacrificed, but the morning af acre. Thexhange is one of the mar- ter election it always bobs up salls vels of this marvelous time and this fied and serene. It has been beaten marvelous state, . Business sagacity, so much that It prospers on defeat application of science to the soil and and usually expects little else. progressive endeavor Intelligently di- The one proppwt that Mr. Croker rected wrought' the change typified may. be' rieht with respect td the In this remarkable sale of orchard coming congressional elections is the land at f 237S per acre. j suicidal folly of standpatism',. over L- ' ( I drunk with its manifold successes. HARK TWAIVS CRTTTO I and an occasional gleam of Intelli gence in present Democratic leader- HIS IS Indeed, a wicked And sin- ship RealUlng the pitfalls, snares ful. world. It is even more and delusions that beset national I Letters From the People A Census Episode. , s Portland. Or Aurll 22 rTo tha Edl ter ef The JournaLReferrlng to your editorial "under, caption, "A Mere Acci dent," In which you express the Hope that "we have a count that will be a count," now about this: One of the enumerators called at 432 ?th street on tne, 111th , mat, and entered In his boo as follows: Head of family, wife and daughter living at said number; a son living at cape Horn, stata f Wash ingion; one son (married) livin 1 on east side; on son living on Willamette boulevard: One son living on Fifth near Main street, and a daughter tmarried) living t Bridal Veil. If other enumerators ar dolnr the work in the same manner, we certainly -win nave a count, that will be a count"--' ; .;. ; v v .. DAILT -READER OP JOtTRNAt. ' T Wicked, and more sinful than I conduct of tie nartv. the Democratic any of ns had supected nnill Houston Pot. utters' this ratheUc our leuow townswoman communl- prayer: ' On Lora, now tnat every- cated to us the horrible information thing is coming our way, purge every that It was the hjblt of Mark Twain Democratic soul of hot air and Tain- to swear. , Palsied be the band and glory and insert large lantallraeDts shriveled the voice that could bsiof common mdm in every Democra- hereafter lifted In defense of the hu morist. Since a maa to respected la that revealed as one wont to swear, what dark tucplclocs must all of ui tot have that there are other umua-p-ted hot slr.fo! taea whrj are l!Ve- tt tr g-'tn.'T r v.aMng-l wise guilty. -Ylo knows but society :. r-r ' li r. r"i-3 wijrr.gy b rotfen to the rore with the f i i iaa-a'Trs. tt f.i-t is '.' ' 'r.t Tc'ri tr tswjlvj T t"'. 0 f'-T c-f r''5" t li r t 1 r - ..- rc. ( J J-"- faearicg "rlV.rvzt," asd to knows I :it one cf thein rr.av t the has:.an4 cf sosie good bet tfocelve.J woman A'.a, who kcows tut rpht fctre ia tic cranium and oh remember. Lord, our pronenets to cake fools of our selves Just when we have the world by the tall and a downhill pull, and se th&t we don't gt ia bad this time." . It is cot ei;e-ted Irst the Iitt rotten borough cf Rhode Ii:acd wt:i t'-t a tree rerrntatire cf the people ta i-jrr-pc-1 AlJrlch, H wVA b s-tr.e trust ra! -r srl rr.e w:tb- By I. C Welliver in Hampton's Mega- . sine. " - ' 7,'- . Holland was lonar the' world's sua-ar headquarters. - In the . old. rude davs Of. sugaT making, Amsterdam brokers gauged sugar purity entirely by color. The color was presumed to be llrhter In proportion aa the molasses had been drained off the crystals. Th Dutch standard consisted of to glass bottles, filled with 20 grades of sugjr carefully graduated In color from the darkest to the lightest The dark est was almost molasses, with aucar crystals mixed in It, and was No. 1; nexi vgmrr was fio.. i; and so on up. When a cargo, of sugar came into Amsterdam, sample were taken to a broker's "offle and "matched" with the standard colors. The sugar was certified to be of the grade Indicated by the number on the bottle whose color "matched" th nm. pie. Prices were 'made according to the Dutch standard numbers; number 20 drew the highest nd No. 1 the lawut price. Holland .being tl autar emoorlum." the Dutch Standard became the world's tsnoard. . Senator Bristow frt Ms fUht sratnst the Sugar trust recently asked the senate:- , "Why de yon object to removing the Dutch standard T .Because," replied Senator RmUh. "I think the commercial world has been srutoraed to that standard. I would not render the sugar world cha otic by MHklrwc out a standard that Is rec"a-nlc-d whererr engar la produced." Brlatow looked like a pnglllat swing ing for the knockout blow, ss he re- pll1: r . " srator is mistaken. After n. Tnlr.!-: te tariff livt ef ome H na tions I have hr a I'M cf tn that um the Dvtch standarj and thos that do not. Countr1 that An net use the Du-li standard, t nlted Klnsdnm. South African Uni". AoatmUa, Auatrla-Hun-rry. B"isrium. Bolrarla, Franr. Tunis -T- C.reee. Helena, all rlf h col. r.i-. i.t. Momm N'ornar nus- ia. J. .. r). '. -. : s 1 1. 8-rv'a, fra'iv t . K-r,a. r . Hclurta f'-a'a Kia, WjSif. pniiv), Prur1!. I ' . fr !--", F- ,41-r. rr i." I'm a.ar. Ve-.-.a. Ci-ba. liai-.t. Ix-rNRl-tti Rr"jr''e.. I ':t Tr.j the r.aTV. Today Is the anniversary of the es. tablishment of the Order of the Garter, the highest order of chivalry in Great Britain. It waa instituted i ty, King Edward III. and though not tne most ancient la one of the most famous of tha chivalrous orders of Europe. The original number, of the, knlghta of the Garter was , 25, th , sovereign himself making, the 26tiw, i r . --The. story usually .given aa to the origin of the order ," goes that the Countees of Balisbtiry let fall her garter while, dancing with the king, and that the king stopped quickly to pica; tt up. This occasioned some, indelicate Jokes which caused the Countess to withdrs,w. Th klnr exclaimed angrUy, "Hon! soit qui mal r pense" (shame o him who evil thlnka and added - that , ha would make thta? blue ribbon mo glorious that all th: courtier, would desire ..It-. . ( ThslNew International Encyclopae dia Is authority for-the Statement that thla story has absolutely no foundation in fact for th reason : that r Edward had formed the plan for th order in 1344 and Instituted it on April 13. 1S4.j It was founded In honor . of the Holy Trtnlty.Uh. Virgin Mary, Saint Edward the -Confessor and EL nSeorgre. but the last who had. beoorae the jfutelary saint of England, was, considered Ita. special Fpatron, and for that reason It has borne the title of "Th order or at oeorg aa well as of "The Garter." ' The emblem Of the order is a dark blue ribbon edged with gold bearing th Latin motto given above in goia letters. It "is worn on the left leg be low the knee. -An authority credits the founding of the order for th purpose of attracting to the king's party such soldiers of fortup as might be likely to aid In asserting the claim which he was then making to fe th crown of France and Intended ; as n Imitation of King Arthur's Round Table. The officers of the order ar the prelate, the : chancellor, th register, th garter king 'of arms, and the usher of the black rod.- ' ' - , - - By a statute passed On the 17th of Cottage Grove and vicinity have si a loose garment confined bv a broad hir ' sawmills. A new 150.000 lumher com-1 or tlrdla at th v.-lf Thi. vi. i- pany has Just been organised there. - worn rather l0OMi of ten ln tha .... There is still much the lenther belts, which are particular-. nrtng grain to be sown. Even at the l7 rasnionabie. railing below the waist best there is bound to be much landlet n rront, or course, this makes the lav idle for the opportunity and teams figure more bulkv than the unim-i to put it in, , ' v ; ' ' 7 I drawn belt, but th peasant style, which the ia now 'affeotlng.. does ; not en- Btatesmart 'And no excuse whatever for wu J1"" ngure lines, n any; There Is work for every one who n slender enough to stand It. on wants to work: x Who Is going to. tell 1 may be - as loose and comfortahl as bow to abate th tramp nuiaance? , j one pleases. " Women of -amnl nroDor- If the" neonle' of f.ane conntv will "0""' LC ' "ake themselves ' stand back' of the Lane County' Asset K!;"" 1 " "ucn . aresses, ir company as they should, we predict that I2fy wear suitable long corsets and the. the first railroad to" reach Coos Bay thlnest kind of undergarments. , " will start from Eueene. savs the Guard. , . ,., '- 7; ; No other movement in this direction is f A feature of the seasant blouse 1 its ng handled more systematically, nas geamlesa ehnulder th re real backing, or as satisfactory a !. " ""I'v "Imv being cut route to build over, y " - witn ine ooay or tne gar- j .iicuv. s nt-txnjo ar run in oeneatn in CnnaMerahla excitement has . been I sleeves and "down the sides' of th mr. brewing during the past several months jment; and in th genuine peasant smock ' iays the Chief, .which has resulted in "Vl" 1? m,n r lne8eJtT assays being made recently that make der-arm and under-sleeve seama. This the residents of that district confident square patch Is to be found in most of, that in the near future they are ss- the French blouses tmitatlno- the nnaa. 7 sured of great : opulence. Henry , Mail-I ant stvle. t hnilaYh DmflfAltia rlfatidmelrai-a "ofeWwsW rormers land, in wnicn ny certined 'ML, . T"? C A. -T. u made, hv a Ban Francisco firm, gold I gives freedom when the arm is raised la found to the value of 1871.75 per ton. land adds extra strength, to the garment. Paris haa taken up glnghamfor warm V weather costumes, and hRS placed the stamp of Its approval upon that once de- cldedly plebeian material, ' However, th v April 23 in HistorjrOrJer of tke Garter , China,- Japan,- .British India, Portugal, Denmark. Sweden, Canada and the Tinn ed States, i. 7;'i,7: tThe advocates of th standard that is recegniseff wherever sugar Is pro duced' wer speechless. ;. Their pet pre tense had been exposed by a Httie non- est Information. -,;, . :. . . . :; Mr. Welliver maintains that, If con gress will eliminate the "Dutch stand ard" from ., the tariff schedules, . the power of the trust will be broken, and American beet sugar will have an oppor tunity to compete Independently for the domestic business, .m rigntiy main tains that the sugar tariff as" well as all other tariffs la not so objectionable because of. Its economics, as It la be cause of Ita morals, fiuch trusts athe Sugar 'trust are constantly corrupting our machinery of government at Wash ington. To end the sugar monopolv and these attendant evils once for all, Mr. Welliver suggests a r.ew sugsr tariff law, doing awayentlr!y with the Dutch standard. The Dutch standard is sim ply and solely a color standard; It has nothing to do with the purity of the sugar. In .fact the Ctrhan sugar maker has to go to extra expense to keep from giving us the pure white sugar w pre fer to use. The next time the sugar tariff Is up for revision ' th "Dutch standard" must be wiped out.- 1 " 1 " 1' January. 1805, the 'order Is to consist ginghams affected by the French wom of the sovereign and 28 knigbts compan-en or fashion jear but little resemblance ions, togemer wun eucn iineai uescena- to the old fashioned cotton material of ante, of George III as may, be elected, that name. Some of the new ginghams always excepting the Prince of Wales. ar qUt4l B expensive as silk. Often, who Is a constituent part of the original as far as the material goes, 'one mav institution. ' . ' , - pay quit' as much . for one's Scotch There are six other orders of wnlght- gingham morning frock as for the aft hood,tn Graat . Britain, the Thistle, St ernoon costume of foulard; and the Patrick, -the -Bath, the fitar.-of India, gingham frock may be quite" As smart tot. Michael .and St. George and .the In Its way as the mo're ambitious model Indian Empire. - . - - - of silk. The silk novelty glnghams are Regarding th Incident of Lady Sails- particularly fine and lght In texture, bury toeing her .garter, Sir, Harris and the colorings are very soft and likely than that In a crowded assembly a lady should accidentally have dropped 1 Thourh hot literally In dowhle-nklH- her garter; that the clroumstane Should effect, the chiffon - tunics .over summer nav causeo a smne m tne oystanaers; foulards are exceedingly dainty i and , and that on Its being taken up by Ed- charming. : These tunics are usually tn ward h.should bav approved.the levity the crusader style, .with" a loose, belted Of hi courtiers by ao happy and chival- blouse attached to a long skirt which reu nxelamation, .placing-th arter hanga about to the knee." , A French -at the same- time on. his own knee, as tunlo shown on some imported models, 'Dishonored, be.be who thinks ill of if but not greatly' favored 1n this country. Such a circumstance occurring at a time is of two shades of ohlffon. a darker of general festivity, when devices, mot- yoke and hem being added to a tunla of toes and conceits of all kinds were light tint The plain colored tunics, adopted as ornaments or badges of the however, ar prettiest over the nat. habits worn at Jousts and tournaments, tamed foulards, and some very charm would naturally have been eommem- lng affects are achieved by a harmonl orated a other royal expressions seem ous blending of tints. .. For Instance, a to hay been by -Us conversion Into a wood brown, chiffon "tunic was hung N device and motto-for, th dresses at an over a a-reen foulard: a . amok a-rav approaching hastilude.- , - , . tunlo over an old blue and white pat. tern: a light areen tunlo over a darker While authorities differ on. the sub- green silk, and so on. Rose colored fou- ' Ject. April 2J Is usually given as hards are . usually draped ..with,, black Shakespeare's birthday .(1M1), at least chiffon, and. one very smart model of : he waa baptised April 28. It is the date this sort showed a red and whit fou- on which Heurlk Hudson sailed on his lard in the broken sided square design ' first voyage ordiscovery In 1607. The called "rooster trarik.- In . accordance , date on .Which -the first gun of ths with the present Chantecler fad, over Spanlah-American 7:war was fired which wasdraoed'a black chiffon tunlo. . by the-United States "NashviUe' across Hat and parasol were In the brilliant tne now or tne epanisn t-nuena vista" Chantecler. or cockscomb red. in, I8s, it is th birthday or Stephen A. Douglas, k th ' statesman ; , (1818) ; s; It is reported from th Riviera that unauncey m. 7jjepew; ramoua ? "arter-l parasols ' In deep, positive tones ar dinner speaker, (1834); and Edward much in vogue, and will undoubtedly be Markham, the poet (1852)i It is , the fashionable during th coming summer ' date on which William Wordsworth, the season. -These- solid one-color effects poet, died in 1850, . 7 , :. , are In coaching style, usually with the , elongated stick. This,; however, Is not . Apple as Cure for Intemperance. I. "T" " 1 DA n " .TuT . . . VT . tween th short English stick and the , Th forbidden fruit of the Garden of extremely long Directoire. . ,.7.. Eden which brought sin into the world . , . is now looked on as the means of drlv- Most elaborate parasols for afternoen Jng sin out of the. world. No less an c0""" developed In brocades, v " Mrift aan rVlnwas mala wmm YaMaat aM) august body than the Iowa State Hortl- with deep fringes made from lacet and cultural society la sUhding onsor for ter Qulte a new Wea ,8 tn, lntroauci in movement to-remove tne stigma tlon of triangular panels of metal net from the apple.- ' - .lor lace on th rib points. ' This, In eon- When Eve. sorely tempted, partook or 1 1,.. i ri.h th. hmoorf. h. the luscious fruit which she had been I fH.,.i v,nr,i.r niv.. forbidden -to touch, ah all unwittingly effect. These fringes are not. the old cast a ciignt on the apple which een- fashioned, silk thread fringe, but ar turies Of. civilization and tWo national formed of novelty rlhtion hraM .n shows at Spokane have been tmsble to give quite aVnew effect Handsome' remove. - It haa remained for an apple-parasols covered with black and white loving -country doctor to discover that lane hv foundations or m ti"o. va,r can ine wona ds lea until it cloth or gojd net Other novelties in hss secured the necessary calories ofjparajsols are lined with metal nets. tea- The Comet. ' All hall! " Great scorcher-of th skyN We welcome thee from.worlds on high! To our terrestrial ball. " Plno thou win! here millions have gone To Jnjri great unnumbered throng Of those whp died before. And million who Hehold the now, -Wtll nevr in thy preaenc bow When thou Shalt tym again. Great comet! H't thou found a tongue?, To tell ua all that science won? If so, let's) bear Its -music ' O. mar we k what you hay seen? May we Inquire where yon bav been I For five an aeventv yearsT O. how I wish teat you would talk An-1 teil us f your mighty walit Throughout the mi;y way. What do rM know 'cf s'l the etaraf Whst ran yoti say "f neighbor Mars. Ita rf c-'T Are a! " ""- m . rt h1r- bleesed? A" 1 " t- r r" nr rt 1'rrm sr.lr, rg ar, 1 frm toll? f-lk tVv pt'r' Ar i t ! it tf In ioi s gt Ft J ) ra. 1. 'ffty on. !' -rail. FLT.TCnTK. energy, but that the craving for liquor conceded to be the greatest cause of misery -and crime caii be . eradicated from the hitman body by the apple. As If this were not miracle enough. It Is contended that General Grant might have won the siege of Vlcksburg and the battle of Appomattox by munching on a Ben Davla, a Spltzenburr or a Jonathan, just as well as by puffing on a fat black cigar. , The use of spples as an article of diet will, very much diminish, decrease and ultimately abate the sppetlte for al coholic stimulants, " declares Dr. Samuel Bailey of Mount Ayr. Iowa. "That this Is a fact could be proved In many In stances if a little care, caution and vigi lance were taken to thoroughly investi gate conditions. As a rule, the habitual uaer of alcoholic stimulants Is rarely s lover or consumer of appleg. There eeema to be a peculiar combination In spplra. ia the arid In them, or In the peculiar chemical combinations of the arrle. that allays the Irritation, or so called appetite, produced by the use of liquor, i sin also cf the opinion that t.e keen arpeilte for tobacco is limited riy tne uee or arpits- I tifylng to the great vogue for metal. . .. . FLORENCE FAIRBANKS.' Dissatisfaction (Ontrftmtrd. to Th Journal ey Walt Maana, tba faoKHta Kansas pnet Hla proae-pnms ar a rrg-nlar feature of Una column la Xba Dally iouroal.) , "I'd like to be a doctor, and cure up human Ills, and dope my friends and neighbors with gutta percha pills." re marked the hardware merchant, grown weary of his store, cf all the tiresome labors he'd know so oft before. Td like to deal In hardware," the fagred out doctor walls, and dish up -rusty ' raxors snd bolts and boneless nails, for I ant tired of going on Journeys nlfrht snd flay, -of sawing people Irrs off and " waiting for tbe. pay." Td like to be a banker." the , downcaat farmer cries, "and sit behind a rstllng and look pro foundly wis, and watch my hlrelincs shovel the gold Into a bin. and se folks come snd g-ovl to gain s frlnd!y erin; I'm tlrd of rhaMne- rootrs and rer.J- m thorouchlr I lrS Kese and rturka; I mnnt to be a eonvlneed that any man who Is a lovr ! banker. r,d deal In shlrtrg buck.- -pd cf whlakey and is In m condition when ,!k tn f'9 farmer.' tSe ead-eyed bank he thinks he must hays "a drink. If he j 'r "andTSles big Jack-A-lam'ems wl'il eat .an err! before he takes tejns feed' on rurrfkln plea I'd like to drink, will fir.j that hla arpetite for the ' currv feoraps and l ltrh them to a cart; 1T A drink has been materially l.ened. If not entirely stated for the time." Va w -trv T- rr,- Tbe hortt urion bours In ths "rl i are i,ms eetat'ishd bv Tvp-r-aphlral t'r'nri. Nl S, of S'.y Tr.rlt (Itr. The r-e-r.era p t' o'ir,?a t:on work five h'irn a (!?y a " d -t a mi-i"-,un ate rf Cl a Wf-k. Th r '"'sa t rrr-ly r-, y fjr h'-grt In 1,'!V. ht t e u- on Vr., jr 1 1 r-y n. j -' 1 : ' t t- u. i c I d like to Jump t:.e tewn and gt neitt to nature's heart. For I am t red of money and tt( mr ar.1 t-'-.Ia sni act.. ' I fall wou'.i rr-f-Xi th rsrmyard S"4 rnlrula w'ti t- g.-it" Oh, Is th-a snr rl't''- who Sw.nl wail ro mat'-r st M a-.p , tn find arv d'T l'b? No miti.r hat r-f e Fe. i tune h i".r::i-r er,t It a jtu '-tr cf 1 - t s i d'-oct-t ' ' ' " " 1 v" fs a'j u f" r pp t.t ex ' a -ri x r.u ...a ce r ty. Trey are".